Abstract

PurposeThere is a significant need for a widely available, translatable, sensitive and non-invasive imaging biomarker for tumor hypoxia in radiation oncology. Treatment-induced changes in tumor tissue oxygenation can alter the sensitivity of cancer tissues to radiation, but the relative difficulty in monitoring the tumor microenvironment results in scarce clinical and research data. Oxygen-Enhanced MRI (OE-MRI) uses inhaled oxygen as a contrast agent to measure tissue oxygenation. Here we investigate the utility of dOE-MRI, a previously validated imaging approach employing a cycling gas challenge and independent component analysis (ICA), to detect VEGF-ablation treatment-induced changes in tumor oxygenation that result in radiosensitization. MethodsMurine squamous cell carcinoma (SCCVII) tumor-bearing mice were treated with 5 mg/kg anti-VEGF murine antibody B20 (B20-4.1.1, Genentech) 2–7 days prior to radiation treatment, tissue collection or MR imaging using a 7 T scanner. dOE-MRI scans were acquired for a total of three repeated cycles of air (2 min) and 100% oxygen (2 min) with responding voxels indicating tissue oxygenation. DCE-MRI scans were acquired using a high molecular weight (MW) contrast agent (Gd-DOTA based hyperbranched polygylcerol; HPG-GdF, 500 kDa) to obtain fractional plasma volume (fPV) and apparent permeability-surface area product (aPS) parameters derived from the MR concentration–time curves. Changes to the tumor microenvironment were evaluated histologically, with cryosections stained and imaged for hypoxia, DNA damage, vasculature and perfusion. Radiosensitizing effects of B20-mediated increases in oxygenation were evaluated by clonogenic survival assays and by staining for DNA damage marker γH2AX. ResultsTumors from mice treated with B20 exhibit changes to their vasculature that are consistent with a vascular normalization response, and result in a temporary period of reduced hypoxia. DCE-MRI using injectable contrast agent HPG-GDF measured decreased vessel permeability in treated tumors, while dOE-MRI using inhaled oxygen as a contrast agent showed greater tissue oxygenation. These treatment-induced changes to the tumor microenvironment result in significantly increased radiation sensitivity, illustrating the utility of dOE-MRI as a non-invasive biomarker of treatment response and tumor sensitivity during cancer interventions. ConclusionsVEGF-ablation therapy-mediated changes to tumor vascular function measurable using DCE-MRI techniques may be monitored using the less invasive approach of dOE-MRI, an effective biomarker of tissue oxygenation that can monitor treatment response and predict radiation sensitivity.

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