| Literature DB >> 34507591 |
Lavinia Morosi1,2, Marina Meroni1, Maurizio D'Incalci1,2,3, Roberta Frapolli4, Paolo Ubezio1, Ilaria Fuso Nerini1,2, Lucia Minoli5,6, Luca Porcu1, Nicolò Panini1, Marika Colombo1, Barbara Blouw7, David W Kang8, Enrico Davoli9, Massimo Zucchetti1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Scarce drug penetration in solid tumours is one of the possible causes of the limited efficacy of chemotherapy and is related to the altered tumour microenvironment. The abnormal tumour extracellular matrix (ECM) together with abnormal blood and lymphatic vessels, reactive stroma and inflammation all affect the uptake, distribution and efficacy of anticancer drugs.Entities:
Keywords: Drug distribution; Extracellular matrix; Hyaluronan; Mass spectrometry imaging; Solid tumours
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34507591 PMCID: PMC8434701 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-021-02070-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Grey-level size-zone matrix features
| Abbreviation | Name | Description | Mathematical formula |
|---|---|---|---|
| ZP | Zone percentage | lower values indicate that the image is made of a few large zones with the same grey-level. Higher values indicate greater fragmentation of the image into small zones | nzones/npix |
| LZE | Large zone emphasis | associated with the presence of wide areas with similar drug concentrations, regardless of whether they are low or high | ∑ij Zijj2 /nzones |
| HGZE | High Grey-level Zone Emphasis | indicative of the presence of areas with high drug concentrations, regardless of their size | ∑ij Ziji2 /nzones |
| LZHGE | Large-zone High Grey-level Emphasis | focuses on the presence of wide areas with high drug concentrations | ∑ij Zijj2 i2 /nzone |
| IV | Intensity variability | highest when there are few large zones with low drug concentrations. It decreases when the concentration increases and smaller zones are formed with higher drug concentrations | ∑i (∑j Zij)2/i4/nzones |
| GLNn | Grey-Level Non-uniformity normalised | highest when zones concentrate to a single grey level, lower when all grey levels are equally represented (poorly sensitive to redistribution among grey levels) | (∑i (∑j Zij)2 /nzones)/nzones |
| ZSμ | Zone Size mean | average size of the zones, independently of the grey level. Strongly affected by the presence of a large number of small zones | ∑ij Zijj /nzones |
| DHI | Drug-homogeneity index | a recently proposed feature measuring the average area of the larger zones (over a given arbitrary threshold ν) as a fraction of the ROI area | ∑i,j ≥ ν j Zij /∑i,j ≥ ν Zij /npix |
i: grey levels; j: zone sizes; nzones: total number of zones; npix: total number of pixels in the ROI
Fig. 1Antitumor activity of PEGPH20 and PTX in SKOV3 (A) and SKOV3/HAS3 (B) models. Tumour bearing mice (n = 9 and n = 8 in SKOV3 and SKOV3/HAS3 experiments, respectively) were randomized to receive PTX 20 mg/kg q7dx3 with or without the pre-treatment with PEGPH20 0.1 mg/kg, or PEGPH20 alone. In the SKOV3/HAS3 but not in the parental SKOV3 model, hyaluronidase combined with PTX dramatically enhanced the antitumor activity (** Wilcoxon Rank-Sum test stratified by intervals: p-value< 0.001 comparing the entire experimental groups)
Fig. 2PTX distribution in SKOV3 and SKOV3/HAS3 tumors 4 h after a single PTX treatment, with or without PEGPH20 pre-treatment. Three tumours were analysed for each group. A Mass spectrometry images. One representative section of three analysed for each tumour is shown. B GLSZM features in SKOV3 and C SKOV3/HAS3 tumours. A selected panel of features (mean, CV%, LZE-Large-Zone Emphasis, HGZE-High Grey-level Zone Emphasis, IV-Intensity Variability, GLNn-normalised Grey-Level Non-uniformity and DHI-Drug Homogeneity Index) describing drug distribution and influenced by PEGPH20 pre-treatment is presented. The mean value of each feature was rescaled to the PTX mean for comparison (*p-value< 0.05). D Tumour concentrations of PTX measured by HPLC in the second half of the same tumours analysed for MSI
Fig. 3Representative images of the different tissue architecture of SKOV3 and SKOV3/HAS3 tumours after PEGPH20 and PTX treatment. A H&E staining, 100x; B Alcian Blue staining with nuclear red counterstain, 200x magnification; C representative HA staining images and D HA quantification in the different experimental groups (*Student's t-test: p-value< 0.05; **Student's t-test: p-value< 0.01)
Fig. 4A Mass spectrometry images of PTX distribution in tumour tissues of parental SKOV3 or SKOV3/HAS3 after repeated treatment, q7dx2. Three tumours were analysed for each group. One representative section of three analysed for each tumour is shown. B GLSZM features (mean, CV%, LZE-Large-Zone Emphasis, HGZE-High Grey-level Zone Emphasis, IV-Intensity Variability, GLNn-normalised Grey-Level Non-uniformity and DHI-Drug Homogeneity Index) describing PTX distribution in SKOV3 or C SKOV3/HAS3 tumours 4 h after PTX, with or without PEGPH20 pre-treatment (repeated treatment, q7dx2) * Student's t test: p-value< 0.05. D Tumour concentrations of PTX in the second half of the same tumours analysed for MSI after PEGPH20 or vehicle pre-treatment (repeated treatment, q7dx2) **Student's t test: p-value< 0.01
Fig. 5A Mass spectrometry images of PTX distribution in BxPC3 tumour tissues after PEGPH20 or vehicle pre-treatment; three tumours were analysed for each group. One representative section of three analysed for each tumour is shown; B The features describing drug distribution (mean, CV%, LZE-Large-Zone Emphasis, HGZE-High Grey-level Zone Emphasis, IV-Intensity Variability, GLNn-normalised Grey-Level Non-uniformity and DHI-Drug Homogeneity Index) and C tumour concentrations of PTX 4 h after the last treatment. D Representative HA staining images in the BxPC3 tumour, in PTX and PTX + PEGPH20 treated animals. E Tumour growth of BxPC3 bearing mice (n = 8) after treatment with PEGPH20 and PTX singly or in combination