Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of California Davis, Davis, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2010 Oct 11;5(10):e13254. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0013254.
Plaque vulnerability to rupture has emerged as a critical correlate to risk of adverse coronary events but there is as yet no clinical method to assess plaque stability in vivo. In the search to identify biomarkers of vulnerable plaques an association has been found between macrophages and plaque stability--the density and pattern of macrophage localization in lesions is indicative of probability to rupture. In very unstable plaques, macrophages are found in high densities and concentrated in the plaque shoulders. Therefore, the ability to map macrophages in plaques could allow noninvasive assessment of plaque stability. We use a multimodality imaging approach to noninvasively map the distribution of macrophages in vivo. The use of multiple modalities allows us to combine the complementary strengths of each modality to better visualize features of interest. Our combined use of Positron Emission Tomography and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (PET/MRI) allows high sensitivity PET screening to identify putative lesions in a whole body view, and high resolution MRI for detailed mapping of biomarker expression in the lesions.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Macromolecular and nanoparticle contrast agents targeted to macrophages were developed and tested in three different mouse and rat models of atherosclerosis in which inflamed vascular plaques form spontaneously and/or are induced by injury. For multimodal detection, the probes were designed to contain gadolinium (T1 MRI) or iron oxide (T2 MRI), and Cu-64 (PET). PET imaging was utilized to identify regions of macrophage accumulation; these regions were further probed by MRI to visualize macrophage distribution at high resolution. In both PET and MR images the probes enhanced contrast at sites of vascular inflammation, but not in normal vessel walls. MRI was able to identify discrete sites of inflammation that were blurred together at the low resolution of PET. Macrophage content in the lesions was confirmed by histology.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The multimodal imaging approach allowed high-sensitivity and high-resolution mapping of biomarker distribution and may lead to a clinical method to predict plaque probability to rupture.
斑块易破裂与不良冠脉事件风险密切相关,但目前尚无临床方法可在体内评估斑块稳定性。在寻找易损斑块的生物标志物时,发现巨噬细胞与斑块稳定性之间存在关联——病变中巨噬细胞的密度和定位模式表明斑块破裂的可能性。在极不稳定的斑块中,巨噬细胞高度聚集并集中在斑块肩部。因此,对斑块中巨噬细胞进行定位的能力可以实现对斑块稳定性的非侵入性评估。我们使用多模态成像方法来非侵入性地对体内巨噬细胞的分布进行成像。多种模态的联合使用使我们能够结合每种模态的互补优势,更好地观察感兴趣的特征。我们对正电子发射断层扫描和磁共振成像(PET/MRI)的联合使用可以通过高灵敏度的 PET 筛查来识别整个身体视图中的可疑病变,并通过高分辨率 MRI 对病变中生物标志物表达进行详细的成像。
方法/主要发现:开发并在三种不同的动脉粥样硬化小鼠和大鼠模型中测试了针对巨噬细胞的大分子和纳米颗粒对比剂,这些模型中炎症性血管斑块自发形成和/或通过损伤诱导形成。为了进行多模态检测,设计了探针以包含钆(T1 MRI)或氧化铁(T2 MRI)和铜-64(PET)。PET 成像用于识别巨噬细胞积累区域;通过 MRI 进一步探测这些区域,以高分辨率可视化巨噬细胞分布。在 PET 和 MR 图像中,探针都在血管炎症部位增强了对比度,但在正常血管壁上则没有。MRI 能够识别 PET 低分辨率下模糊在一起的离散炎症部位。病变中的巨噬细胞含量通过组织学得到证实。
结论/意义:多模态成像方法可以实现生物标志物分布的高灵敏度和高分辨率成像,可能为预测斑块破裂概率的临床方法铺平道路。