| Literature DB >> 31695839 |
Karina Juhl1,2, Anders Christensen1,2,3, Niclas Rubek3, Kirstine Kim Schmidt Karnov1,2,3,4, Christian von Buchwald3, Andreas Kjaer1,2.
Abstract
Pancreatic cancer remains one of the deadliest cancers. The five-year survival rates have been reported as 3%. Radical surgical tumor resection is critical for improved outcome and the low survival rate for pancreatic cancer is due to lack of other effective treatments and here optical guided surgery could be a solution for better surgical outcome. In the present study, we targeted the urokinase plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) with a peptide conjugated with the fluophore ICG (ICG-Glu-Glu-AE105) for optical imaging. In the first part of the study we aimed to validate ICG-Glu-Glu-AE105 for resection of the primary tumor and metastases in an orthotopic human xenograft pancreatic cancer model. In the second part of the study we aimed to investigate if fluorescent-guided imaging could locate additional metastases following conventional removal of metastasis under normal white light surgery. Our study showed that ICG-Glu-Glu-AE105 was an excellent probe for intraoperative optical imaging with a mean tumor-to-background ratio (TBR) for the primary tumor of 3.5 and a TBR for the metastases of 3.4. Further, a benefit using intraoperative fluorescent guidance yielded identification of an additional 14% metastases compared to using normal white light surgery. In 4 of 8 mice there were identified additional metastases with uPAR optical imaging compared to white light. In conclusion, the uPAR-targeted optical probe ICG-Glu-Glu-AE105 enables intraoperative optical cancer imaging, including robotic surgery, and may be a benefit during intended radical resection of disseminated pancreas cancer by finding more metastasis than with traditional white light surgery. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: NIR-I; cancer; near-infrared imaging (NIR); optical imaging; urokinase plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR)
Year: 2019 PMID: 31695839 PMCID: PMC6824874 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.27220
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Fluorescent images of pancreatic tumors.
(A) Representative fluorescent image of a primary tumor developed after inoculation of the cell line BxPC3. luc2 in the tail of the pancreas. The image was taken 15 h post iv. injection of ICG-Glu-Glu-AE105 with the clinically approved fluorescent camera Fluobeam800® (B). Several days after removal of the primary tumor small tumor metastases developed in the peritoneal cavity and were clearly visible by fluorescent imaging after iv. injection of ICG-Glu-Glu-AE105. In both images the fluorescent image is processed in Image J and merged with a white light image.
Tumor-to-background (TBR) values for primary tumor and metastases
| Mean TBR | 95% confidence interval | |
|---|---|---|
| Primary tumor | 3.5 ( | 3.3; 3.7 |
| Metastases | 3.4 ( | 3.1; 4.0 |
Some metastases were down to 1 mm3 and still clearly visible. Tumor to background values.
Number of metastasis found during surgery
| Number of metastases/number of mice | Percentage of total number of metastasis found | 95% confidence interval | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Found with white light | 29 | 67% | 52; 81% |
| Additionally found with FGS | 6 | 14% | 5; 28% |
|
| |||
| Mice with additional metastasis only found with FGS | 4 | 50% | 16; 84% |
All mice (n = 8) developed metastasis, and in 50% of the mice additional metastases were found after turning the fluorescent camera on. FGS: Fluorescense guided surgery using ICG-Glu-Glu-AE105. Number of metastasis found during surgery.
Figure 2Presentation of one of the mice enrolled in the study part II where comparison of white light surgery and fluorescent guided surgery was the aim.
(A) Fluorescent image of orthotopically placed primary pancreas tumor 15 h post injection of ICG-Glu-Glu-AE105. (B) Fluorescent image of a metastases left behind after surgery with white light only. This metastases was detected with the fluorescent camera Fluobeam800® only and was not visible during white light operation. (C) Bioluminescence was used as the gold standard for verification of the presence of tumor cells. All suspected foci (white light and fluorescent) were investigated for presence of tumor cells from a bioluminescence image. (D) Table overview of suspected tumor foci found throughout the surgery of a representative mouse. No. 1–4 were found under normal surgery condition, no. 5–6 were found after turning the fluorescent camera on. No. 7 was found only by imaging the animal after ended surgery with bioluminescence.
Figure 3Images of a primary orthotopic pancreas human xenograft tumor as seen with the robotic Da Vinci® system.
This system allows the surgeon to switch between normal colour image and a fluorescent image. The image is taken 15 h post injection of ICG-Glu-Glu-AE015 after an incision in in the abdomen. (A) Image represent a normal white light operating view while image (B) is the fluorescent view with NIR vision turned on.
Figure 4Study timeline over part II of the study, where white light surgery is compared with fluorescent guided surgery in 5 mice with ICG-Glu-Glu-AE105 was used as optical probe 15 h post iv. injection.
The tumor growth was followed with bioluminescence before surgery to ensure tumor size and spread and was done after surgery to ensure that residual tumor foci were located after surgery.