Dinca Eduard B, Sarkaria Jann N, Schroeder Mark A, Carlson Brett L, Voicu Ramona, Gupta Nalin, Berger Mitchel S, James C David
Neuroscience Graduate Program, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.
J Neurosurg. 2007 Sep;107(3):610-6. doi: 10.3171/JNS-07/09/0610.
Bioluminescence imaging (BLI) offers a rapid and accurate means for longitudinal study of tumor cell growth and response to therapy in rodent models. Because this technology has only recently come into use in the field of small animal imaging, applications in this area have been limited. In the current study we have applied BLI to the analysis of clinically relevant issues involving use of the DNA methylating agent temozolomide (TMZ) in a mouse model.
An invasive glioblastoma multiforme xenograft was modified for BLI via transduction with a luciferase-encoding lentivirus. Supratentorial tumors were established in athymic nude mice that were subsequently assigned randomly to control and TMZ treatment groups, and the extent of intracranial tumor was monitored using BLI.
In an experiment designed to compare the extent of antitumor effect between a single high-dose TMZ treatment and a protracted low-dose TMZ regimen, BLI revealed the protracted regimen as having superior antitumor effect, and this interpretation was consistent with results from a survival comparison between the two TMZ treatment groups. In a second experiment designed to assess the utility of BLI for testing therapies against recurrent glioblastoma multiforme, mice with intracranial tumors were retreated with TMZ at a time when BLI monitoring revealed tumor regrowth following initial TMZ treatment, and retreatment was successful in providing additional survival benefit.
The results of these experiments indicate that BLI monitoring can be used as a surrogate for predicting survival benefit from TMZ treatment, permits early determination of relative survival benefit associated with distinct TMZ therapeutic regimens, and offers a means of investigating secondary/salvage therapy efficacy following tumor regrowth from initial therapy.
生物发光成像(BLI)为在啮齿动物模型中纵向研究肿瘤细胞生长及对治疗的反应提供了一种快速且准确的方法。由于该技术最近才在小动物成像领域得到应用,因此该领域的应用一直有限。在本研究中,我们将BLI应用于分析涉及在小鼠模型中使用DNA甲基化剂替莫唑胺(TMZ)的临床相关问题。
通过用编码荧光素酶的慢病毒转导,对侵袭性多形性胶质母细胞瘤异种移植瘤进行BLI改造。在无胸腺裸鼠中建立幕上肿瘤,随后将其随机分为对照组和TMZ治疗组,并使用BLI监测颅内肿瘤的范围。
在一项旨在比较单次高剂量TMZ治疗与延长低剂量TMZ方案的抗肿瘤效果的实验中,BLI显示延长方案具有更好的抗肿瘤效果,这一解释与两个TMZ治疗组之间的生存比较结果一致。在第二项旨在评估BLI用于测试复发性多形性胶质母细胞瘤治疗效果的实验中,当BLI监测显示初始TMZ治疗后肿瘤复发时,对颅内肿瘤小鼠再次使用TMZ进行治疗,再次治疗成功提供了额外的生存益处。
这些实验结果表明,BLI监测可作为预测TMZ治疗生存益处的替代方法,允许早期确定与不同TMZ治疗方案相关的相对生存益处,并提供一种研究初始治疗后肿瘤复发后的二线/挽救治疗疗效的方法。