He Qiuhong, Xu Ray Z, Shkarin Pavel, Pizzorno Giuseppe, Lee-French Carol H, Rothman Douglas L, Shungu Dikoma C, Shim Hyunsuk
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, Departments of Medical Physics and Radiology, 1275 York Avenue, New York, NY 10021, USA.
Dis Markers. 2003;19(2-3):69-94. doi: 10.1155/2004/424395.
Cancer cells display heterogeneous genetic characteristics, depending on the tumor dynamic microenvironment. Abnormal tumor vasculature and poor tissue oxygenation generate a fraction of hypoxic tumor cells that have selective advantages in metastasis and invasion and often resist chemo- and radiation therapies. The genetic alterations acquired by tumors modify their biochemical pathways, which results in abnormal tumor metabolism. An elevation in glycolysis known as the "Warburg effect" and changes in lipid synthesis and oxidation occur. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) has been used to study tumor metabolism in preclinical animal models and in clinical research on human breast, brain, and prostate cancers. This technique can identify specific genetic and metabolic changes that occur in malignant tumors. Therefore, the metabolic markers, detectable by MRS, not only provide information on biochemical changes but also define different metabolic tumor phenotypes. When combined with the contrast-enhanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), which has a high sensitivity for cancer diagnosis, in vivo magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) improves the diagnostic specificity of malignant human cancers and is becoming an important clinical tool for cancer management and care. This article reviews the MRSI techniques as molecular imaging methods to detect and quantify metabolic changes in various tumor tissue types, especially in extracranial tumor tissues that contain high concentrations of fat. MRI/MRSI methods have been used to characterize tumor microenvironments in terms of blood volume and vessel permeability. Measurements of tissue oxygenation and glycolytic rates by MRS also are described to illustrate the capability of the MR technology in probing molecular information non-invasively in tumor tissues and its important potential for studying molecular mechanisms of human cancers in physiological conditions.
癌细胞表现出异质性的遗传特征,这取决于肿瘤动态微环境。异常的肿瘤血管系统和组织氧合不足会产生一部分缺氧肿瘤细胞,这些细胞在转移和侵袭方面具有选择性优势,并且常常对化疗和放疗产生抗性。肿瘤获得的基因改变会改变其生化途径,从而导致肿瘤代谢异常。出现了被称为“瓦伯格效应”的糖酵解增加以及脂质合成和氧化的变化。磁共振波谱(MRS)已被用于在临床前动物模型以及人类乳腺癌、脑癌和前列腺癌的临床研究中研究肿瘤代谢。该技术可以识别恶性肿瘤中发生的特定基因和代谢变化。因此,可通过MRS检测到的代谢标志物不仅提供有关生化变化的信息,还能定义不同的代谢肿瘤表型。当与对癌症诊断具有高灵敏度的对比增强磁共振成像(MRI)相结合时,体内磁共振波谱成像(MRSI)提高了人类恶性肿瘤的诊断特异性,并正在成为癌症管理和护理的重要临床工具。本文综述了MRSI技术作为分子成像方法来检测和量化各种肿瘤组织类型中的代谢变化,特别是在含有高浓度脂肪的颅外肿瘤组织中。MRI/MRSI方法已被用于根据血容量和血管通透性来表征肿瘤微环境。还描述了通过MRS测量组织氧合和糖酵解速率,以说明MR技术在肿瘤组织中无创探测分子信息的能力及其在生理条件下研究人类癌症分子机制的重要潜力。