Schepkin Victor D, Lee Kuei C, Kuszpit Kyle, Muthuswami Mukilan, Johnson Timothy D, Chenevert Thomas L, Rehemtulla Alnawaz, Ross Brian D
National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32310, USA.
NMR Biomed. 2006 Dec;19(8):1035-42. doi: 10.1002/nbm.1074.
The ultimate goal of any cancer therapy is to target the elimination of neoplastic cells. Although newer therapeutic strategies are in constant development, therapeutic assessment has been hampered by the inability to assess, rapidly and quantitatively, efficacy in vivo. Diffusion imaging and, more recently, sodium MRI have demonstrated their distinct abilities to detect therapy-induced alterations in tumor cellularity, which has been demonstrated to be indicative of therapeutic efficacy. More importantly, both imaging modalities detect tumor response much earlier than traditional methodologies that rely on macroscopic volumetric changes. In this study, the correlation between tumor sodium and diffusion was further tested to demonstrate the sensitivity of sodium imaging to gauge tumor response to therapy by using a 9L rat gliosarcoma treated with varying doses of BCNU [1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea]. This orthotopic model has been demonstrated to display variability in response to BCNU therapy where initial insult has been shown to lead to drug-resistance. In brief, a single 26.6 mg/kg BCNU dose yielded dramatic responses in both diffusion and sodium MRI. However, a second equivalent BCNU dose yielded a much smaller change in diffusion and sodium, suggesting a drop in tumor sensitivity to BCNU. The MRI responses of animals treated with 13.3 mg/kg BCNU were much lower and similar responses were observed after the initial and secondary applications of BCNU. Furthermore, these results were further validated using volumetric measurements of the tumor and also ex vivo determination of tumor sensitivity to BCNU. Overall, these experiments demonstrate the sensitivity and applicability of sodium and diffusion MRI as tools for dynamic assessment of tumor response to therapy.
任何癌症治疗的最终目标都是靶向清除肿瘤细胞。尽管新的治疗策略在不断发展,但由于无法在体内快速且定量地评估疗效,治疗评估受到了阻碍。扩散成像以及最近的钠磁共振成像已证明它们在检测治疗引起的肿瘤细胞密度变化方面具有独特能力,而肿瘤细胞密度变化已被证明可指示治疗效果。更重要的是,这两种成像方式都比依赖宏观体积变化的传统方法更早地检测到肿瘤反应。在本研究中,通过使用不同剂量的卡氮芥[1,3-双(2-氯乙基)-1-亚硝基脲]治疗的9L大鼠胶质肉瘤,进一步测试了肿瘤钠与扩散之间的相关性,以证明钠成像在评估肿瘤对治疗反应方面的敏感性。这种原位模型已被证明在对卡氮芥治疗的反应中表现出变异性,其中最初的损伤已被证明会导致耐药性。简而言之,单次26.6 mg/kg的卡氮芥剂量在扩散和钠磁共振成像中均产生了显著反应。然而,第二次等量的卡氮芥剂量在扩散和钠方面产生的变化要小得多,这表明肿瘤对卡氮芥的敏感性下降。用13.3 mg/kg卡氮芥治疗的动物的磁共振成像反应要低得多,并且在卡氮芥的初次和二次应用后观察到了类似的反应。此外,使用肿瘤的体积测量以及肿瘤对卡氮芥敏感性的离体测定进一步验证了这些结果。总体而言,这些实验证明了钠和扩散磁共振成像作为动态评估肿瘤对治疗反应的工具的敏感性和适用性。