| Literature DB >> 30147998 |
Mitchel R Stacy1, Albert J Sinusas2.
Abstract
The field of regenerative medicine has experienced considerable growth in recent years as the translation of pre-clinical biomaterials and cell- and gene-based therapies begin to reach clinical application. Until recently, the ability to monitor the serial responses to therapeutic treatments has been limited to post-mortem tissue analyses. With improvements in existing imaging modalities and the emergence of hybrid imaging systems, it is now possible to combine information related to structural remodeling with associated molecular events using non-invasive imaging. This review summarizes the established and emerging imaging modalities that are available for in vivo monitoring of clinical regenerative medicine therapies and discusses the strengths and limitations of each imaging modality.Entities:
Keywords: Biomaterials; Cell therapy; Gene therapy; Molecular imaging; Regenerative medicine; Tissue engineering
Year: 2015 PMID: 30147998 PMCID: PMC6096727 DOI: 10.1007/s40139-015-0073-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Pathobiol Rep ISSN: 2167-485X
Benefits and limitations of clinical imaging modalities
| Modality | Sensitivity | Penetration depth | Spatial resolution | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ultrasound | Moderate | Low | 1 mm | Widely available; inexpensive; no ionizing radiation; real-time imaging | Limited molecular probes; small field of view; operator dependent |
| MR | Moderate | No limit | <1–3 mm3 | No ionizing radiation; high spatial resolution | Susceptibility to motion artifacts; limited molecular probes; not compatible for patients with metallic implants or renal insufficiency; long imaging times |
| SPECT | High | No limit | ~5–8 mm3 | High sensitivity; multiple radiotracers available for molecular imaging; ability to serially monitor long half-life isotopes | Exposure to ionizing radiation; attenuation from low-energy photons |
| PET | High | No limit | ~3–5 mm3 | High sensitivity; established methods for attenuation correction; accurate and precise quantification | Exposure to ionizing radiation; need for on-site cyclotron or generator; advanced radiochemistry |
| CT | Limited | No limit | <1 mm3 | High spatial resolution can be combined with other modalities (PET/SPECT) | Exposure to ionizing radiation; patient sensitivity to iodinated contrast agents |
| OCT | High | Low | 10–20 μm | High-resolution intravascular imaging; superior plaque imaging | Catheterization required; poor penetration depth |
Modified from Naumova et al. [2]
Fig. 1Fusion of in vivo multimodality imaging in a porcine model of myocardial infarction following intramyocardial transplantation of human-induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) transfected with NIS. a SPECT imaging of 99mTc-tetrofosmin fused with coronary CT angiography (CTA) allowed for visualization of perfusion defect and coronary anatomy in the anterior wall of the left ventricle. b Fusion of coronary CTA and SPECT imaging of NIS-transfected cells labeled with 123I demonstrated focal 123I hot spots localized to the sites of cell injection. c Fusion of CTA, SPECT 99mTc-tetrofosmin, and SPECT 123I permitted visualization of perfusion defect (identified as red/pink) and NIS-transfected cells (identified as white areas) located near the infarct border zones. d NOGA voltage mapping and linear local shortening (LLS) plots of the left ventricle revealed impaired electrical activity within region of myocardial infarction, which was used to guide transplantation of transfected and control cells that are identified as e dark red spots on a volume rendering of LLS. f Volume rendering of quadruple fusion of CTA, SPECT 99mTc-tetrofosmin, SPECT 123I, and NOGA demonstrated localization of intramyocardial cell injections to infarct border zones, with control cell injection sites not associated with focal uptake of 123I. Reprinted with permission of [22] (Color figure online)