| Literature DB >> 31182936 |
Sara Gargiulo1, Sandra Albanese1, Marcello Mancini1.
Abstract
The op<span class="Chemical">tin>cal imaging plays an increasing role in preclinical studies, <span class="Chemical">par<span class="Chemical">ticularly in cancer biology. The combined ultrasound and optical imaging, named photoacoustic imaging (PAI), is an emerging hybrid technique for real-time molecular imaging in preclinical research and recently expanding into clinical setting. PAI can be performed using endogenous contrast, particularly from oxygenated and deoxygenated hemoglobin and melanin, or exogenous contrast agents, sometimes targeted for specific biomarkers, providing comprehensive morphofunctional and molecular information on tumor microenvironment. Overall, PAI has revealed notable opportunities to improve knowledge on tumor pathophysiology and on the biological mechanisms underlying therapy. The aim of this review is to introduce the principles of PAI and to provide a brief overview of current PAI applications in preclinical research, highlighting also on recent advances in clinical translation for cancer diagnosis, staging, and therapy.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31182936 PMCID: PMC6515147 DOI: 10.1155/2019/5080267
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Contrast Media Mol Imaging ISSN: 1555-4309 Impact factor: 3.161
Figure 1Physical principles of cancer PAI. Short pulsed laser light is used to irradiate the tumor area, inducing ultrasonic waves from endogenous or exogenous photoabsorbers on the basis of thermoelastic expansion. An US transducer is used to detect the PA signal. Contrast obtained from PAI can be useful in characterization and monitoring of tumors (adapted with permission from Valluru and Willmann [2], CC BY-NC-ND license, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/).
Summary of main endogenous and exogenous PA contrast agents.
| Imaging agent | Absorption wavelength (nm) | Cancer biomarker | Cancer type | Multimodality | Theranostics | Application | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||
| Hemoglobin | 760–850 | Angiogenesis | Brain, breast, Prostate | — | — | Preclinical/clinical | [ |
| Melanin | 700 |
| Skin, ocular, lung | PET-MRI-PAI | PTT | Preclinical/clinical | [ |
|
| |||||||
|
| |||||||
| Indocyanine green | 600–900 |
| Lung, liver, colon, brain | MRI-PAI | PTT | Preclinical/clinical | [ |
| Gold NPs | 650–110 |
| Lung, prostate, ovaries, stomach, skin, brain | CT-MRI-PAI | PTT/PDT | Preclinical | [ |
| Palladium NPs | 826–1068 |
| Breast | — | PTT | Preclinical | [ |
| Copper sulfide NPs | 826–1068 |
| Breast | — | PTT | Preclinical | [ |
| Bismuth NPs | 1000–1700 | EPR effect | Breast, brain | CT-PAI | PTT | Preclinical | [ |
| Titanium NPs | 808 | EPR effect | Breast, cervix | — | PTT/PDT | Preclinical | [ |
| Iron oxide NPs | 600–900 | FR | Breast, ovaries | PET-MRI-PAI | PTT | Preclinical | [ |
| Superparamagnetic iron oxide NPs | 500–780 | HER2 | Breast | — | PTT | Preclinical | [ |
| Carbon-based NPs | 350–700 |
| Breast, brain, skin, lung, stomach | FL-PAI | PTT/PDT | Preclinical | [ |
| Graphdiyne | NPs | 690 | FR | Breast | FL-PAI | Preclinical | [ |
| Semiconducting polymer NPs | 660–748 |
| Breast, brain, cervix | FL-PAI | PTT/PDT | Preclinical | [ |
Figure 2Optical absorption spectra of major endogenous chromophores in tissues of living organisms. The highlighted windows (NIR-I and NIR-II) indicate the wavelength ranges corresponding to minimized optical absorption (reprinted with permission from Deán-Ben et al. [119], CC BY-NC-ND license, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
Figure 3PAI of tumor oxygenation. (a) B mode image of an orthotopic xenograft of lung cancer with corresponding maximum intensity projection (MIP) CEUS images at time points (t) 0, 2, and 10 s after microbubbles IV injection. (b) B mode image of a hypoxic lung tumor with corresponding oxygenation map (OxyHemo mode), showing red areas representing the oxygenated part, while blue and dark areas representing hypoxic parts of the tumor. In the following merged US-PA image, the 3D volumes of the whole tumor (green net) and of the hypoxic region of tumor (red net) are reconstructed. (c) Corresponding B mode, OxyHemo mode, merged US PA, and 3D volume images of a more oxygenated lung tumor without hypoxic core (reprinted with permission from Raes et al. [127], CC BY-NC-ND license, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
Figure 4Representative description of the IJA structure and potential use for multimodal imaging and PTT (reprinted with permission from Liu et al. [31], CC BY-NC-ND license, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
Figure 5Representative PA images of U-87 MG and A431 xenografts acquired before and 24 hours after injection of ICG alone and ICG-RGD. In contrast to epidermoid carcinoma, the PA signal intensity in glioblastoma was significantly higher after ICG-RGD injection compared to measurements assessed at baseline and after free ICG administration (red region of interest) (adapted with permission from Capozza et al. [24], CC BY-NC-ND license, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
Figure 6In vivo PAI of MDA-MB231 xenograft mouse model before and 1 hour after IV injection of Pd-COS-RGD (adapted with permission from Bharathiraja et al. [56], CC BY-NC-ND license, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/). (a) Before injection; (b) after injection.
Figure 7Multiwavelength in vivo PAI (a) before and (b) after subcutaneous injection of indigoid π-conjugated SPNs, showing their ability to distinguish PA signal generated by the contrast agent and vasculature for potential oncological applications (adapted with permission from Stahl et al. [92], CC BY-NC-ND license, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).