Montet Xavier, Figueiredo Jose-Luiz, Alencar Herlen, Ntziachristos Vasilis, Mahmood Umar, Weissleder Ralph
Center for Molecular Imaging Research, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Building 149, 13th St, Room 5403, Charlestown, MA 02129, USA.
Radiology. 2007 Mar;242(3):751-8. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2423052065.
To prospectively determine the feasibility of imaging vascular volume fraction (VVF) and its therapeutic inhibition in mouse models of cancer with three-dimensional fluorescence molecular tomography (FMT).
All studies were approved by the institutional animal review committee and were in accordance with National Institutes of Health guidelines. CT26 colon tumor-bearing mice were imaged with FMT after intravenous administration of long-circulating near-infrared fluorescent blood-pool agents optimized for two nonoverlapping excitation wavelengths (680 and 750 nm). A total of 58 mice were used for imaging VVF to evaluate the following: (a) differences in ectopically and orthotopically implanted tumors (n = 10), (b) cohorts of mice (n = 24) treated with anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) antibody, (c) serial imaging in same animal to determine natural course of angiogenesis (n = 4), and (d) dose response to anti-VEGF therapy (n = 20). To compare groups receiving antiangiogenic chemotherapy, analysis of variance was used.
Fluorochrome concentrations derived from FMT measurements were reconstructed with an accuracy of +/-10% at 680 nm and +/-7% at 750 nm and in a depth-independent manner, unlike at reflectance imaging. FMT measurements of vascular fluorescent probes were linear, with concentration over several orders of magnitude (r > 0.98). VVFs of colonic tumors, which varied considerably among animals (3.5% +/- 1.5 [standard deviation]), could be depicted with in vivo imaging in three dimensions with less than 5 minutes of imaging and less than 3 minutes of analysis. The natural course of angiogenesis and its inhibition could be reliably imaged and depicted serially in different experimental setups.
FMT is a tomographic optical imaging technique that, in conjunction with appropriate fluorescent probes, allows quantitative visualization of biologic processes.
前瞻性地确定利用三维荧光分子断层扫描(FMT)对癌症小鼠模型中的血管体积分数(VVF)进行成像及其治疗性抑制的可行性。
所有研究均经机构动物审查委员会批准,并符合美国国立卫生研究院的指导方针。给荷CT26结肠肿瘤的小鼠静脉注射针对两种不重叠激发波长(680和750 nm)优化的长循环近红外荧光血池剂后,用FMT进行成像。总共58只小鼠用于VVF成像以评估以下内容:(a)异位和原位植入肿瘤的差异(n = 10),(b)用抗血管内皮生长因子(VEGF)抗体治疗的小鼠队列(n = 24),(c)在同一动物中进行连续成像以确定血管生成的自然进程(n = 4),以及(d)对抗VEGF治疗的剂量反应(n = 20)。为比较接受抗血管生成化疗的组,采用方差分析。
与反射成像不同,从FMT测量得出的荧光染料浓度在680 nm处的重建精度为±10%,在750 nm处为±7%,且与深度无关。血管荧光探针的FMT测量呈线性,浓度跨越几个数量级(r > 0.98)。结肠肿瘤的VVF在动物之间差异很大(3.5% ± 1.5 [标准差]),可以通过体内三维成像在不到5分钟的成像时间和不到3分钟的分析时间内进行描绘。血管生成的自然进程及其抑制可以在不同的实验设置中可靠地进行成像和连续描绘。
FMT是一种断层光学成像技术,与适当的荧光探针结合,能够对生物过程进行定量可视化。