From the Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Division of MR Research, the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 733 N Broadway, Room 659, Baltimore, MD 21205 (A.M.T., J.W.M.B.); Cellular Imaging Section and Vascular Biology Program, Institute for Cell Engineering, the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Md (A.M.T., J.W.M.B.); Department of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands (F.B.); and Institutes of Neurology and Healthcare Engineering, University College London, London, England (F.B.).
Radiology. 2022 Jun;303(3):486-497. doi: 10.1148/radiol.211252. Epub 2022 Apr 26.
Imaging has been a critical component of multiple sclerosis (MS) management for nearly 40 years. The visual information derived from structural MRI, that is, signs of blood-brain barrier disruption, inflammation and demyelination, and brain and spinal cord atrophy, are the primary metrics used to evaluate therapeutic efficacy in MS. The development of targeted imaging probes has expanded our ability to evaluate and monitor MS and its therapies at the molecular level. Most molecular imaging probes evaluated for MS applications are small molecules initially developed for PET, nearly half of which are derived from U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved drugs and those currently undergoing clinical trials. Superparamagnetic and fluorinated particles have been used for tracking circulating immune cells (in situ labeling) and immunosuppressive or remyelinating therapeutic stem cells (ex vivo labeling) clinically using proton (hydrogen 1 [H]) and preclinically using fluorine 19 (F) MRI. Translocator protein PET and H MR spectroscopy have been demonstrated to complement imaging metrics from structural (gadolinium-enhanced) MRI in nine and six trials for MS disease-modifying therapies, respectively. Still, despite multiple demonstrations of the utility of molecular imaging probes to evaluate the target location and to elucidate the mechanisms of disease-modifying therapies for MS applications, their use has been sparse in both preclinical and clinical settings.
影像学一直是多发性硬化症(MS)管理的重要组成部分,已经有近 40 年的历史。结构磁共振成像(MRI)提供的视觉信息,即血脑屏障破坏、炎症和脱髓鞘以及脑和脊髓萎缩的迹象,是评估 MS 治疗效果的主要指标。靶向成像探针的发展扩展了我们在分子水平上评估和监测 MS 及其治疗方法的能力。用于 MS 应用的大多数分子成像探针都是最初为 PET 开发的小分子,其中近一半来自美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)批准的药物,目前正在进行临床试验。超顺磁性和氟化颗粒已用于临床跟踪循环免疫细胞(原位标记)和免疫抑制或髓鞘再生治疗性干细胞(体外标记),临床使用质子(氢 1 [H]),临床前使用氟 19(F)MRI。转位蛋白 PET 和 H 磁共振波谱已分别在 9 项和 6 项 MS 疾病修饰治疗试验中证明可补充结构(钆增强)MRI 的成像指标。尽管已经多次证明分子成像探针在评估靶位和阐明 MS 疾病修饰治疗机制方面的效用,但在临床前和临床环境中,它们的使用都很少。