Abstract

Most effective antitumor therapies induce tumor cell death. Non-invasive, rapid and accurate quantitative imaging of cell death is essential for monitoring early response to antitumor therapies. To facilitate this, we previously developed a biocompatible necrosis-avid near-infrared fluorescence (NIRF) imaging probe, HQ4, which was radiolabeled with 111Indium-chloride (111In-Cl3) via the chelate diethylene triamine pentaacetic acid (DTPA), to enable clinical translation. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the application of HQ4-DTPA for monitoring tumor cell death induced by radiation therapy. Apart from its NIRF and radioactive properties, HQ4-DTPA was also tested as a photoacoustic imaging probe to evaluate its performance as a multimodal contrast agent for superficial and deep tissue imaging. Radiation-induced tumor cell death was examined in a xenograft mouse model of human breast cancer (MCF-7). Tumors were irradiated with three fractions of 9 Gy each. HQ4-DTPA was injected intravenously after the last irradiation, NIRF and photoacoustic imaging of the tumors were performed at 12, 20, and 40 h after injection. Changes in probe accumulation in the tumors were measured in vivo, and ex vivo histological analysis of excised tumors was performed at experimental endpoints. In addition, biodistribution of radiolabeled [111In]DTPA-HQ4 was assessed using hybrid single-photon emission computed tomography-computed tomography (SPECT-CT) at the same time points. In vivo NIRF imaging demonstrated a significant difference in probe accumulation between control and irradiated tumors at all time points after injection. A similar trend was observed using in vivo photoacoustic imaging, which was validated by ex vivo tissue fluorescence and photoacoustic imaging. Serial quantitative radioactivity measurements of probe biodistribution further demonstrated increased probe accumulation in irradiated tumors. HQ4-DTPA has high specificity for dead cells in vivo, potentiating its use as a contrast agent for determining the relative level of tumor cell death following radiation therapy using NIRF, photoacoustic imaging and SPECT in vivo. Initial preclinical results are promising and indicate the need for further evaluation in larger cohorts. If successful, such studies may help develop a new multimodal method for non-invasive and dynamic deep tissue imaging of treatment-induced cell death to quantitatively assess therapeutic response in patients.

Highlights

  • The International Agency for Research on Cancer estimated that globally in 2012, 14.1 million new patients were diagnosed with cancer and that this number will increase to more than 20 million in 2025 [1]

  • To evaluate the application of HQ4-diethylene triamine pentaacetic acid (DTPA) in addition to the near-infrared fluorescence (NIRF) property that was described previously [38], the photoacoustic property of carboxylated cyanine HQ4-DTPA was tested in a phantom composed of transparent plastic tubes

  • We evaluated HQ4-DTPA as a multimodal necrosis-avid imaging agent to assess tumor response to a clinically relevant radiotherapy dose using a MCF-7 human breast cancer mouse xenograft model

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Summary

Introduction

The International Agency for Research on Cancer estimated that globally in 2012, 14.1 million new patients were diagnosed with cancer and that this number will increase to more than 20 million in 2025 [1]. Conventional methods for monitoring antitumor treatment response are based on anatomical imaging, e.g., X-ray, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) every 6–8 weeks during the course of treatment as described in the Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumors (RECIST) [2]. There is a need for novel imaging methods to assess tumor response early and at a cellular/molecular level in order to determine treatment efficacy accurately and adjust the therapy based on tumor response [5, 6]. Such methods would be non-invasive, clinically practical, and have sufficient sensitivity and specificity for tumor cell death in real time

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