Department of Medical Physics, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, 1275 York Avenue, New York, New York 10021, USA.
Med Phys. 2009 Nov;36(11):5301-9. doi: 10.1118/1.3239491.
An image-guided robotic system was used to measure the oxygen tension (pO2) in rodent tumor xenografts using interstitial probes guided by tumor hypoxia PET images. Rats with approximately 1 cm diameter tumors were anesthetized and immobilized in a custom-fabricated whole-body mold. Imaging was performed using a dedicated small-animal PET scanner (R4 or Focus 120 microPET) approximately 2 h after the injection of the hypoxia tracer 18F-fluoromisonidazole (18F-FMISO). The coordinate systems of the robot and PET were registered based on fiducial markers in the rodent bed visible on the PET images. Guided by the 3D microPET image set, measurements were performed at various locations in the tumor and compared to the corresponding 18F-FMISO image intensity at the respective measurement points. Experiments were performed on four tumor-bearing rats with 4 (86), 3 (80), 7 (162), and 8 (235) measurement tracks (points) for each experiment. The 18F-FMISO image intensities were inversely correlated with the measured pO2, with a Pearson coefficient ranging from -0.14 to -0.97 for the 22 measurement tracks. The cumulative scatterplots of pO2 versus image intensity yielded a hyperbolic relationship, with correlation coefficients of 0.52, 0.48, 0.64, and 0.73, respectively, for the four tumors. In conclusion, PET image-guided pO2 measurement is feasible with this robot system and, more generally, this system will permit point-by-point comparison of physiological probe measurements and image voxel values as a means of validating molecularly targeted radiotracers. Although the overall data fitting suggested that 18F-FMISO may be an effective hypoxia marker, the use of static 18F-FMISO PET postinjection scans to guide radiotherapy might be problematic due to the observed high variation in some individual data pairs from the fitted curve, indicating potential temporal fluctuation of oxygen tension in individual voxels or possible suboptimal imaging time postadministration of hypoxia-related trapping of 18F-FMISO.
使用图像引导机器人系统,通过肿瘤缺氧 PET 图像引导的间质探头测量啮齿动物肿瘤异种移植物中的氧张力 (pO2)。将直径约为 1 厘米的肿瘤大鼠麻醉并固定在定制的全身模具中。大约在注射缺氧示踪剂 18F-氟米索硝唑(18F-FMISO)后 2 小时,使用专用小动物 PET 扫描仪(R4 或 Focus 120 microPET)进行成像。基于 PET 图像上可见的啮齿动物床中的基准标记,对机器人和 PET 的坐标系进行注册。在 3D 微 PET 图像集的指导下,在肿瘤的不同位置进行测量,并将测量点的相应 18F-FMISO 图像强度与测量结果进行比较。在 4 只荷瘤大鼠上进行了实验,每次实验的测量轨迹(点)分别为 4(86)、3(80)、7(162)和 8(235)。18F-FMISO 图像强度与测量的 pO2 呈负相关,22 条测量轨迹的 Pearson 系数范围为-0.14 至-0.97。pO2 与图像强度的累积散点图呈双曲线关系,四个肿瘤的相关系数分别为 0.52、0.48、0.64 和 0.73。总之,该机器人系统可实现 PET 图像引导的 pO2 测量,更普遍地说,该系统将允许逐个比较生理探针测量值和图像体素值,作为验证分子靶向放射性示踪剂的方法。尽管总体数据拟合表明 18F-FMISO 可能是一种有效的缺氧标志物,但由于拟合曲线的一些个体数据对观察到的高变异性,使用静态 18F-FMISO PET 注射后扫描来指导放射治疗可能会出现问题,这表明个别体素中的氧张力可能存在时间波动,或者 18F-FMISO 与缺氧相关的捕获后可能存在不理想的成像时间。