Improved tumor identification using dual tracer molecular imaging in fluorescence guided brain surgery

被引:0
|
作者
Xu, Xiaochun [1 ]
Torres, Veronica [1 ]
Straus, David [2 ]
Brey, Eric M. [1 ]
Byrne, Richard W. [2 ]
Tichauer, Kenneth M. [1 ]
机构
[1] IIT, Biomed Engn, Chicago, IL 60616 USA
[2] Rush Univ, Med Ctr, Dept Neurosurg, Chicago, IL 60612 USA
来源
MOLECULAR-GUIDED SURGERY: MOLECULES, DEVICES, AND APPLICATIONS | 2015年 / 9311卷
关键词
Fluorescence-guided surgery; Mouse xenograft model; Epidermal growth factor; Glioma; Brain tumor; Dual tracer; Kinetic modeling; DELIVERY; CANCER; ANTIBODIES; BARRIERS;
D O I
10.1117/12.2076305
中图分类号
O43 [光学];
学科分类号
070207 ; 0803 ;
摘要
Brain tumors represent a leading cause of cancer death for people under the age of 40 and the probability complete surgical resection of brain tumors remains low owing to the invasive nature of these tumors and the consequences of damaging healthy brain tissue. Molecular imaging is an emerging approach that has the potential to improve the ability for surgeons to correctly discriminate between healthy and cancerous tissue; however, conventional molecular imaging approaches in brain suffer from significant background signal in healthy tissue or an inability target more invasive sections of the tumor. This work presents initial studies investigating the ability of novel dual-tracer molecular imaging strategies to be used to overcome the major limitations of conventional " single-tracer" molecular imaging. The approach is evaluated in simulations and in an in vivo mice study with animals inoculated orthotopically using fluorescent human glioma cells. An epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) targeted Affibody-fluorescent marker was employed as a targeted imaging agent, and the suitability of various FDA approved untargeted fluorescent tracers (e.g. fluorescein & indocyanine green) were evaluated in terms of their ability to account for nonspecific uptake and retention of the targeted imaging agent. Signal-to-background ratio was used to measure and compare the amount of reporter in the tissue between targeted and untargeted tracer. The initial findings suggest that FDA-approved fluorescent imaging agents are ill-suited to act as untargeted imaging agents for dual-tracer fluorescent guided brain surgery as they suffer from poor delivery to the healthy brain tissue and therefore cannot be used to identify nonspecific vs. specific uptake of the targeted imaging agent where current surgery is most limited.
引用
收藏
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Tracers for Fluorescence-Guided Surgery: How Elongation of the Polymethine Chain in Cyanine Dyes Alters the Pharmacokinetics of a Dual-Modality c[RGDyK] Tracer
    Buckle, Tessa
    van Willigen, Danny M.
    Spa, Silvia J.
    Hensbergen, Albertus W.
    van der Wal, Steffen
    de Korne, Clarize M.
    Welling, Mick M.
    van der Poel, Henk G.
    Hardwick, James C. H.
    van Leeuwen, Fijs W. B.
    JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 2018, 59 (06) : 986 - 992
  • [22] Tumor Models for Training of Fluorescence-Guided Brain Tumor Resection
    Buckley, Kevin
    Artemiuk, Patrycja A.
    Cabanac, Margaux
    Knoops, Kiki-Narae
    Senft, Christian
    Tejada Solis, Sonia
    Jones, Timothy L.
    Jacquesson, Timothee
    Moiyadi, Aliasgar
    Shetty, Prakash M.
    Singh, Vikas
    Knipps, Johannes
    Rapp, Marion
    Jeising, Sebastian
    Sabel, Michael
    OPERATIVE NEUROSURGERY, 2024, 26 (05) : 584 - 589
  • [23] Fluorescence-guided resection of brain tumor: review of the significance of intraoperative quantification of protoporphyrin IX fluorescence
    Huang, Zheng
    Shi, Songsheng
    Qiu, Haixia
    Li, Desheng
    Zou, Jian
    Hu, Shaoshan
    NEUROPHOTONICS, 2017, 4 (01)
  • [24] The Impact of Temporal Variation in Indocyanine Green Administration on Tumor Identification During Fluorescence Guided Breast Surgery
    Kedrzycki, Martha S.
    Leiloglou, Maria
    Chalau, Vadzim
    Chiarini, Nicolas
    Thiruchelvam, Paul T. R.
    Hadjiminas, Dimitri J.
    Hogben, Katy R.
    Rashid, Faiza
    Ramakrishnan, Rathi
    Darzi, Ara W.
    Elson, Daniel S.
    Leff, Daniel R.
    ANNALS OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY, 2021, 28 (10) : 5617 - 5625
  • [25] Nanoparticle-mediated radiopharmaceutical-excited fluorescence molecular imaging allows precise image-guided tumor-removal surgery
    Hu, Zhenhua
    Chi, Chongwei
    Liu, Muhan
    Guo, Hongbo
    Zhang, Zeyu
    Zeng, Chaoting
    Ye, Jinzuo
    Wang, Jing
    Tian, Jie
    Yang, Weidong
    Xu, Wanhai
    NANOMEDICINE-NANOTECHNOLOGY BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE, 2017, 13 (04) : 1323 - 1331
  • [26] Combination of hand-held probe and microscopy for fluorescence guided surgery in the brain tumor marginal zone
    Richter, Johan C. O.
    Haj-Hosseini, Neda
    Hallbeck, Martin
    Wardell, Karin
    PHOTODIAGNOSIS AND PHOTODYNAMIC THERAPY, 2017, 18 : 185 - 192
  • [27] Dual-Labeled Small Peptides in Cancer Imaging and Fluorescence-Guided Surgery: Progress and Future Perspectives
    Minges, Paul
    Eder, Matthias
    Eder, Ann-Christin
    PHARMACEUTICALS, 2025, 18 (02)
  • [28] An EPR Strategy for Bio-responsive Fluorescence Guided Surgery with Simulation of the Benefit for Imaging
    Daly, Harrison C.
    Conroy, Emer
    Todor, Mihai
    Wu, Dan
    Gallagher, William M.
    O'Shea, Donal F.
    THERANOSTICS, 2020, 10 (07): : 3064 - 3082
  • [29] NIR-II fluorescence imaging in liver tumor surgery: A narrative review
    Liu, Zihao
    Yan, Lifeng
    Hu, Qingsong
    Yin, Dalong
    JOURNAL OF INNOVATIVE OPTICAL HEALTH SCIENCES, 2024, 17 (01)
  • [30] Improved Protoporphyrin IX-Guided Neurosurgical Tumor Detection with Frequency-Domain Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging
    Reichert, David
    Erkkilae, Mikael T.
    Gesperger, Johanna
    Wadiura, Lisa I.
    Lang, Alexandra
    Roetzer-Pejrimovsky, Thomas
    Woehrer, Adelheid
    Wilzbach, Marco
    Hauger, Christoph
    Drexler, Wolfgang
    Kiesel, Barbara
    Widhalm, Georg
    Leitgeb, Rainer A.
    Unterhuber, Angelika
    Andreana, Marco
    APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL, 2022, 12 (03):