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1.
For the treatment of squamous cell cancer of the head and neck (SCCHN), the assessment of treatment response is traditionally accomplished by volumetric measurements and has been suggested to be prognostic for an eventual response to treatment. An early evaluation response during the course of radiation therapy could provide an opportunity to tailor treatment to individual patients. Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) allows for the quantification of tissue water diffusion values, thus treatment-induced loss of tumor cells will result in the increase in water mobility at the microscopic level, which can be detected as an increase in tumor diffusion values before any volumetric changes occur. We evaluated the use of diffusion MRI as an imaging biomarker of treatment response in an orthotopic mouse model of SCCHN. Mice with murine squamous cells expressing the yeast transgene cytosine deaminase were treated with 5-fluorocytosine (5FC), ionizing radiation, and combined therapy and were compared with control animals both during and after treatment for changes in tumor volumes, diffusion values, and survival. Radiation therapy had minimal effect on volumetric growth rate, diffusion, or survival. Although 5FC and combination treatment resulted in similar reductions in tumor volumes, the combination treatment elicited a much greater increase in tumor diffusion values, which correlated with improved survival. Thus, diffusion MRI as an imaging biomarker has a potential for early evaluation of the response to chemoradiation treatment in SCCHN.  相似文献   

2.
Cancer gene therapy is an active area of research relying upon the transfer and subsequent expression of a therapeutic transgene into tumor cells in order to provide for therapeutic selectivity. Noninvasive assessment of therapeutic response and correlation of the location, magnitude, and duration of transgene expression in vivo would be particularly useful in the development of cancer gene therapy protocols by facilitating optimization of gene transfer protocols, vector development, and prodrug dosing schedules. In this study, we developed an adenoviral vector containing both the therapeutic transgene yeast cytosine deaminase (yCD) along with an optical reporter gene (luciferase). Following intratumoral injection of the vector into orthotopic 9 L gliomas, anatomical and diffusion-weighted MR images were obtained over time in order to provide for quantitative assessment of overall therapeutic efficacy and spatial heterogeneity of cell kill, respectively. In addition, bioluminescence images were acquired to assess the duration and magnitude of gene expression. MR images revealed significant reduction in tumor growth rates associated with yCD/5-fluorocytosine (5FC) gene therapy. Significant increases in mean tumor diffusion values were also observed during treatment with 5FC. Moreover, spatial heterogeneity in tumor diffusion changes were also observed revealing that diffusion magnetic resonance imaging could detect regional therapeutic effects due to the nonuniform delivery and/or expression of the therapeutic yCD transgene within the tumor mass. In addition, in vivo bioluminescence imaging detected luciferase gene expression, which was found to decrease over time during administration of the prodrug providing a noninvasive surrogate marker for monitoring gene expression. These results demonstrate the efficacy of the yCD/5FC strategy for the treatment of brain tumors and reveal the feasibility of using multimodality molecular and functional imaging for assessment of gene expression and therapeutic efficacy.  相似文献   

3.
Main contribution of PET in the management of brain tumors is at the therapeutic level. Specific reasons explain this role of molecular imaging in the therapeutic management of brain tumors, especially gliomas. Gliomas are by nature infiltrating neoplasms and the interface between tumor and normal brain tissue may not be accurately defined on CT and MRI. Also, gliomas are often histologically heterogeneous with anaplastic areas evolving within a low-grade tumor, and the contrast-enhancement on CT or MRI does not represent a good marker for anaplastic tissue detection. Finally, assessment of tumor residue, recurrence or progression may be altered by different signals related to inflammation or adjuvant therapies, even on contrast-enhanced CT and MRI. These limitations of the conventional neuroimaging in delineating tumor and detecting anaplastic tissue lead to potential inaccuracy in lesion targeting at different steps of the management (diagnostic, surgical, and post-therapeutic stages). Molecular information provided by PET has proved helpful to supplement morphological imaging data in this context. 18F-FDG (FDG) and amino-acid tracers such as 11C-methionine (MET), provides complementary metabolic data that are independent from the anatomical MR information. These tracers help in the definition of glioma extension, in the detection of anaplastic areas and in the postoperative follow-up. Additionally, PET data have an independent prognostic value. To take advantage of PET data in glioma treatment, PET might be integrated in the planning of image-guided biopsies, radiosurgery and resection.  相似文献   

4.
A novel bimodal fluorescent and paramagnetic liposome is described for cellular labeling. In this study, we show the synthesis of a novel gadolinium lipid, Gd.DOTA.DSA, designed for liposomal cell labeling and tumor imaging. Liposome formulations consisting of this lipid were optimized in order to allow for maximum cellular entry, and the optimized formulation was used to label HeLa cells in vitro. The efficiency of this novel bimodal Gd-liposome formulation for cell labeling was demonstrated using both fluorescence microscopy and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The uptake of Gd-liposomes into cells induced a marked reduction in their MRI T 1 relaxation times. Fluorescence microscopy provided concomitant proof of uptake and revealed liposome internalization into the cell cytosol. The optimized formulation was also found to exhibit minimal cytotoxicity and was shown to have capacity for plasmid DNA (pDNA) transfection. A further second novel neutral bimodal Gd-liposome is described for the labeling of xenograft tumors in vivo utilizing the enhanced permeation and retention effect (EPR). Balb/c nude mice were inoculated with IGROV-1 cells, and the resulting tumor was imaged by MRI using these in vivo Gd-liposomes formulated with low charge and a poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) calyx for long systemic circulation. These Gd-liposomes which were less than 100 nm in size were shown to accumulate in tumor tissue by MRI, and this was also verified by fluorescence microscopy of histology samples. Our in vivo tumor imaging results demonstrate the effectiveness of MRI to observe passive targeting of long-term circulating liposomes to tumors in real time, and allow for MRI directed therapy, wherein the delivery of therapeutic genes and drugs to tumor sites can be monitored while therapeutic effects on tumor mass and/or size may be simultaneously observed, quantitated, and correlated.  相似文献   

5.
Background aimsChimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy is a promising treatment strategy in solid tumors. In vivo cell tracking techniques can help us better understand the infiltration, persistence and therapeutic efficacy of CAR T cells. In this field, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can achieve high-resolution images of cells by using cellular imaging probes. MRI can also provide various biological information on solid tumors.MethodsThe authors adopted the amino alcohol derivatives of glucose-coated nanoparticles, ultra-small superparamagnetic particles of iron oxide (USPIOs), to label CAR T cells for non-invasive monitoring of kinetic infiltration and persistence in glioblastoma (GBM). The specific targeting CARs included anti-human epidermal growth factor receptor variant III and IL13 receptor subunit alpha 2 CARs.ResultsWhen using an appropriate concentration, USPIO labeling exerted no negative effects on the biological characteristics and killing efficiency of CAR T cells. Increasing hypointensity signals could be detected in GBM models by susceptibility-weighted imaging MRI ranging from 3 days to 14 days following the injection of USPIO-labeled CAR T cells. In addition, nanoparticles and CAR T cells were found on consecutive histopathological sections. Moreover, diffusion and perfusion MRI revealed significantly increased water diffusion and decreased vascular permeability on day 3 after treatment, which was simultaneously accompanied by a significant decrease in tumor cell proliferation and increase in intercellular tight junction on immunostaining sections.ConclusionThese results establish an effective imaging technique that can track CAR T cells in GBM models and validate their early therapeutic effects, which may guide the evaluation of CAR T-cell therapies in solid tumors.  相似文献   

6.
MRI是目前直肠癌诊断、分期的首选影像学方法。在判断肿瘤对邻近器官、结构的浸润程度上具有明显优势,尤其是对有较高复发风险的低位肿瘤。常规MRI尤其是高分辨MRI能够清晰显示直肠相关解剖,结合扩散加权成像(Diffusion weighted imaging,DWI)通过确定肿瘤边界,直肠系膜有无受侵,淋巴结及远处转移情况,可以准确有效的进行术前诊断、分期;DWI有助于鉴别辅助治疗后失活与存活组织、筛选出辅助治疗有效的患者,在评估治疗后疗效、提示患者预后方面发挥重要作用,也为临床制定治疗方案提供依据。同时也发现准确进行淋巴结分期、鉴别复发仍然存在困难,需要在以后进一步探讨,提高评估的准确性。本文就近年来MRI在直肠癌术前评价、术后疗效评估、复发监测及表观弥散系数(Apparent diffusion coefficient,ADC)的应用做一综述。  相似文献   

7.
MRI是目前直肠癌诊断、分期的首选影像学方法。在判断肿瘤对邻近器官、结构的浸润程度上具有明显优势,尤其是对有较高复发风险的低位肿瘤。常规MRI尤其是高分辨MRI能够清晰显示直肠相关解剖,结合扩散加权成像(Diffusion weighted imaging,DWI)通过确定肿瘤边界,直肠系膜有无受侵,淋巴结及远处转移情况,可以准确有效的进行术前诊断、分期;DWI有助于鉴别辅助治疗后失活与存活组织、筛选出辅助治疗有效的患者,在评估治疗后疗效、提示患者预后方面发挥重要作用,也为临床制定治疗方案提供依据。同时也发现准确进行淋巴结分期、鉴别复发仍然存在困难,需要在以后进一步探讨,提高评估的准确性。本文就近年来MRI在直肠癌术前评价、术后疗效评估、复发监测及表观弥散系数(Apparent diffusion coefficient,ADC)的应用做一综述。  相似文献   

8.
Under magnetic resonance (MR) guidance, high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) is capable of precise and accurate delivery of thermal dose to tissues. Given the excellent soft tissue imaging capabilities of MRI, but the lack of data on the correlation of MRI findings to histology following HIFU, we sought to examine tumor response to HIFU ablation to determine whether there was a correlation between histological findings and common MR imaging protocols in the assessment of the extent of thermal damage. Female FVB mice (n = 34), bearing bilateral neu deletion tumors, were unilaterally insonated under MR guidance, with the contralateral tumor as a control. Between one and five spots (focal size 0.5 × 0.5 × 2.5 mm3) were insonated per tumor with each spot receiving approximately 74.2 J of acoustic energy over a period of 7 seconds. Animals were then imaged on a 7T MR scanner with several protocols. T1 weighted images (with and without gadolinium contrast) were collected in addition to a series of T2 weighted and diffusion weighted images (for later reconstruction into T2 and apparent diffusion coefficient maps), immediately following ablation and at 6, 24, and 48 hours post treatment. Animals were sacrificed at each time point and both insonated/treated and contralateral tumors removed and stained for NADH-diaphorase, caspase 3, or with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E). We found the area of non-enhancement on contrast enhanced T1 weighted imaging immediately post ablation correlated with the region of tissue receiving a thermal dose CEM43 ≥ 240 min. Moreover, while both tumor T2 and apparent diffusion coefficient values changed from pre-ablation values, contrast enhanced T1 weighted images appeared to be more senstive to changes in tissue viability following HIFU ablation.  相似文献   

9.
The response of the central nervous system to space radiation is largely unknown. The hippocampus, which is known for its critical role in learning and memory, was evaluated for its response to heavy-ion radiation. At 1 month, animals exposed to brain-only 56Fe-particle irradiation (0-4 Gy) were examined using contrast-enhanced T1 imaging (CET1), T2-weighted imaging (T2WI), diffusion weighted imaging (DWI), and (1)H-magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). Correlative histology was performed after imaging. The T2WI, DWI and CET1 images revealed no overt anatomical changes after irradiation. Quantitative analysis demonstrated a significant increase in T2 at 2 Gy compared to 0 Gy. The apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) revealed an inverse dose-dependent quantitative change in water mobility. Compared to 0 Gy, the ADC increased 122% at 1 Gy and declined to 44% above control levels at 4 Gy. MRS showed a significant increase in the N-acetylaspartate/choline ratio at 4 Gy and a lactate peak. Histology demonstrated no overt pathological changes in neuronal and astrocyte populations. However, a significant inverse dose-dependent morphological change in the microglial population was detected in irradiated animals. Our results suggest that early tissue matrix modifications induced by 56Fe-particle radiation can be detected by MRI in the absence of evident histopathology. These changes may indicate fundamental changes in the structure and function of the hippocampus.  相似文献   

10.
Following radiation therapy (RT), tumor morphology may remain unchanged for days and sometimes weeks, rendering anatomical imaging methods inadequate for early detection of therapeutic response. Changes in the hyperpolarized [1-13C]lactate signals observed in vivo following injection of pre-polarized [1-13C]pyruvate has recently been shown to be a marker for tumor progression or early treatment response. In this study, the feasibility of using 13C metabolic imaging with [1-13C]pyruvate to detect early radiation treatment response in a breast cancer xenograft model was demonstrated in vivo and in vitro. Significant decreases in hyperpolarized [1-13C]lactate relative to [1-13C]pyruvate were observed in MDA-MB-231 tumors 96 hrs following a single dose of ionizing radiation. Histopathologic data from the treated tumors showed higher cellular apoptosis and senescence; and changes in the expression of membrane monocarboxylate transporters and lactate dehydrogenase B were also observed. Hyperpolarized 13C metabolic imaging may be a promising new tool to develop novel and adaptive therapeutic regimens for patients undergoing RT.  相似文献   

11.
This article describes methods and issues that are specific to the assessment of change in tumor characteristics as measured using quantitative magnetic resonance (MR) techniques and how this relates to the establishment of quantitative MR imaging (MRI) biomarkers of patient response to therapy. The initial focus is on the various sources of bias and variance in the measurement of microvascular parameters and diffusion parameters as such parameters are being used relatively commonly as secondary or exploratory end points in current phase 1/2 clinical trails of conventional and targeted therapies. Several ongoing initiatives that seek to identify the magnitude of some of the sources of measurement variations are then discussed. Finally, resources being made available through the National Cancer Institute Reference Image Database to Evaluate Response (RIDER) project that might be of use in investigations of quantitative MRI biomarker change analysis are described. These resources include 1) data from phantom-based assessment of system response, including short-term (1 hour) and moderate-term (1 week) contrast response and relaxation time measurement, 2) data obtained from repeated dynamic contrast agent-enhanced MRI studies in intracranial tumors, and 3) data obtained from repeated diffusion MRI studies in both breast and brain. A concluding section briefly discusses issues that must be addressed to allow the transition of MR-based imaging biomarker measures from their current role as secondary/exploratory end points in clinical trials to primary/surrogate markers of response and, ultimately, in clinical application.  相似文献   

12.
Measurements of apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) have been suggested as potential imaging biomarkers for monitoring tumor response to treatment. However, conventional pulsed-gradient spin echo (PGSE) methods incorporate relatively long diffusion times, and are usually sensitive to changes in cell density and necrosis. Diffusion temporal spectroscopy using the oscillating gradient spin echo (OGSE) sequence is capable of probing short length scales, and may detect significant intracellular microstructural changes independent of gross cell density changes following anti-cancer treatment. To test this hypothesis, SW620 xenografts were treated by barasertib (AZD1152), a selective inhibitor of Aurora B kinase which causes SW620 cancer cells to develop polyploidy and increase in size following treatment, ultimately leading to cell death through apoptosis. Following treatment, the ADC values obtained by both the PGSE and low frequency OGSE methods increased. However, the ADC values at high gradient frequency (i.e. short diffusion times) were significantly lower in treated tumors, consistent with increased intracellular restrictions/hindrances. This suggests that ADC values at long diffusion times are dominated by tumor microstructure at long length scales, and may not convey unambiguous information of subcellular space. While the diffusion temporal spectroscopy provides more comprehensive means to probe tumor microstructure at various length scales. This work is the first study to probe intracellular microstructural variations due to polyploidy following treatment using diffusion MRI in vivo. It is also the first observation of post-treatment ADC changes occurring in opposite directions at short and long diffusion times. The current study suggests that temporal diffusion spectroscopy potentially provides pharmacodynamic biomarkers of tumor early response which distinguish microstructural variations following treatment at both the subcellular and supracellular length scales.  相似文献   

13.
It remains difficult to distinguish tumor recurrence from radiation necrosis after brain tumor therapy. Here we show that these lesions can be distinguished using the amide proton transfer (APT) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) signals of endogenous cellular proteins and peptides as an imaging biomarker. When comparing two models of orthotopic glioma (SF188/V+ glioma and 9L gliosarcoma) with a model of radiation necrosis in rats, we could clearly differentiate viable glioma (hyperintense) from radiation necrosis (hypointense to isointense) by APT MRI. When we irradiated rats with U87MG gliomas, the APT signals in the irradiated tumors had decreased substantially by 3 d and 6 d after radiation. The amide protons that can be detected by APT provide a unique and noninvasive MRI biomarker for distinguishing viable malignancy from radiation necrosis and predicting tumor response to therapy.  相似文献   

14.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is an imaging technique with a rapidly expanding application range. This methodology, which relies on quantum physics and substance magnetic properties, is now being routinely used in the clinics and medical research. With the advent of measuring functional brain activity with MRI (functional MRI), this methodology has reached a larger section of the neuroscience community (e.g. psychologists, neurobiologists). In the past, the use of MRI as a biomarker or as an assay to probe tissue pathophysiological condition was limited. However, with the new applications of MRI: molecular imaging, contrast-enhanced imaging and diffusion imaging, MRI is turning into a powerful tool for in vivo characterization of tissue pathophysiology. This review focuses on the diffusion MRI. Although it only measures the averaged Brownian translational motion of water molecules, using different analysis schemes, one can extract a wide range of quantitative indices that represent tissue morphology and compartmentalization. Statistical and visualization routines help to relate these indices to biologically relevant measures such as cell density, water content and size distribution. The aim of this review is to shed light on the potential of this methodology to be used in biological research. To that end, this review is intended for the non-MRI specialists who wish to pursue biological research with this methodology. We will overview the current applications of diffusion MRI and its relation to cellular biology of brain tissue.  相似文献   

15.
We study in silico the influence of host tissue inhomogeneity on tumor cell proliferation and diffusion by simulating the mobility of a tumor on percolation clusters with different homogeneities of surrounding tissues. The proliferation and diffusion of a tumor in an inhomogeneous tissue could be characterized in the framework of the percolation theory, which displays similar thresholds (0.54, 0.44, and 0.37, respectively) for tumor proliferation and diffusion in three kinds of lattices with 4, 6, and 8 connecting near neighbors. Our study reveals the existence of a critical transition concerning the survival and diffusion of tumor cells with leaping metastatic diffusion movement in the host tissues. Tumor cells usually flow in the direction of greater pressure variation during their diffusing and infiltrating to a further location in the host tissue. Some specific sites suitable for tumor invasion were observed on the percolation cluster and around these specific sites a tumor can develop into scattered tumors linked by some advantage tunnels that facilitate tumor invasion. We also investigate the manner that tissue inhomogeneity surrounding a tumor may influence the velocity of tumor diffusion and invasion. Our simulation suggested that invasion of a tumor is controlled by the homogeneity of the tumor microenvironment, which is basically consistent with the experimental report by Riching et al. as well as our clinical observation of medical imaging. Both simulation and clinical observation proved that tumor diffusion and invasion into the surrounding host tissue is positively correlated with the homogeneity of the tissue.  相似文献   

16.
Prior studies using pO(2) microelectrodes have shown that RSR13, an allosteric modifier of hemoglobin, increases tissue oxygenation in vivo. Recently, measurements of tissue oxygenation have been performed by many investigators using blood oxygen level-dependent magnetic resonance imaging (BOLD MRI). In this study, we tested the hypothesis that the BOLD MRI signal ratio in tumors will change after administration of RSR13. NCI-H460 human lung carcinoma cells were used as a xenograft in athymic nude mice. Mice with 1-cm(3) tumors in the flank were anesthetized and mounted on the MRI apparatus, and various doses of RSR13 were administered intraperitoneally (i.p.). MR images were then acquired at 10-min intervals for up to 60 min after injection. The effect of RSR13 on tumor response was studied using the same mouse xenograft model with tumor growth delay measurements. RSR13 increased the MRI signal ratio [Intensity(t)/Intensity(t = 0)] in a dose-dependent manner, with maximum increases occurring 30 min after RSR13 was administered. An RSR13 dose of 200 mg/kg proved to be optimum. Since the MRI signal ratio has been shown previously to be linearly related to tissue oxygenation, the changes in the MRI signal ratio can be attributed to changes in tumor oxygen levels. Using a 200-mg/kg dose of RSR13, with a 10-Gy dose of radiation administered to tumors 30 min later, enhancement of radiation-induced tumor growth delay by RSR13 was observed (enhancement factor = 2.8). Thus our MRI results support and verify the previously reported RSR13-induced increase in tumor oxygenation obtained using pO(2) microelectrodes. Based upon these results and other previous studies, the mechanism of enhancement of the effect of radiation by RSR13 probably involves an increase in tumor oxygenation.  相似文献   

17.
Energy metabolism measurements in spinal cord tumors, as well as in osseous spinal tumors/metastasis in vivo, are rarely performed only with molecular imaging (MI) by positron emission tomography (PET). This imaging modality developed from a small number of basic clinical science investigations followed by subsequent work that influenced and enhanced the research of others. Apart from precise anatomical localization by coregistration of morphological imaging and quantification, the most intriguing advantage of this imaging is the opportunity to investigate the time course (dynamics) of disease-specific molecular events in the intact organism. Most importantly, MI represents one of the key technologies in translational molecular neuroscience research, helping to develop experimental protocols that may later be applied to human patients. PET may help monitor a patient at the vertebral level after surgery and during adjuvant treatment for recurrent or progressive disease. Common clinical indications for MI of primary or secondary CNS spinal tumors are: (i) tumor diagnosis, (ii) identification of the metabolically active tumor compartments (differentiation of viable tumor tissue from necrosis) and (iii) prediction of treatment response by measurement of tumor perfusion or ischemia. While spinal PET has been used under specific circumstances, a question remains as to whether the magnitude of biochemical alterations observed by MI in CNS tumors in general (specifically spinal tumors) can reveal any prognostic value with respect to survival. MI may be able to better identify early disease and to differentiate benign from malignant lesions than more traditional methods. Moreover, an adequate identification of treatment effectiveness may influence patient management. MI probes could be developed to image the function of targets without disturbing them or as treatment to modify the target's function. MI therefore closes the gap between in vitro and in vivo integrative biology of disease. At the spinal level, MI may help to detect progression or recurrence of metastatic disease after surgical treatment. In cases of nonsurgical treatments such as chemo-, hormone- or radiotherapy, it may better assess biological efficiency than conventional imaging modalities coupled with blood tumor markers. In fact, PET provides a unique possibility to correlate topography and specific metabolic activity, but it requires additional clinical and experimental experience and research to find new indications for primary or secondary spinal tumors.  相似文献   

18.
Medulloblastoma is an aggressive childhood cerebellar tumor. We recently reported a mouse model with conditional deletion of Patched1 gene that recapitulates many characteristics of the human medulloblastoma. Qualitative symptoms observed in the mouse model include irregular stride length, impaired cranial nerve function and decreased motor coordination and performance. In our current study, several quantitative behavioral assays including a mouse rotarod, a forced air challenge, a screen inversion test, a horizontal wire test, and stride length analysis were evaluated to determine the most sensitive and cost-effective functional assay for impaired neuromotor behavior associated with disease progression. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was used to confirm and monitor tumor growth and as an anatomical biomarker for therapeutic response. Wild type mice or medulloblastoma-prone, conditional Patched1 knockout mice were observed by behavioral assays and MRI from postnatal weeks 3–6. Bortezomib treatment was administered during this period and therapeutic response was assessed using cerebellar volumes at the end of treatment. Of the behavioral tests assessed in this study, stride length analysis was best able to detect differences between tumor-prone mice and wild type mice as early as postnatal day 37 (P = 0.003). Significant differences between stride lengths of bortezomib treated and control tumor-bearing mice could be detected as early as postnatal day 42 (P = 0.020). Cerebellar volumes measured by MRI at the end of treatment validated the therapeutic effects seen by behavioral tests (P = 0.03). These findings suggest that stride length analysis may serve as one of the more sensitive and cost-effective method for assessing new therapeutic compounds in this and other preclinical model of brain tumors.  相似文献   

19.
Our progress in understanding pathological disease mechanisms has led to the identification of biomarkers that have had a considerable impact on clinical practice. It is hoped that the move from generalized to stratified approaches, with the grouping of patients into clinical/therapeutic subgroups according to specific biomarkers, will lead to increasingly more effective clinical treatments in the near future. This success depends on the identification of biomarkers that reflect disease evolution and can be used to predict disease state and therapy response, or represent themselves a target for treatment. Biomarkers can be identified by studying relationships between serum, tissue, or tumor microenvironment parameters and clinical or therapeutic parameters at onset and during the progression of the disease, using systems biology. Given that multiple pathways, such as those responsible for redox and immune regulation, are deregulated or altered in tumors, the future of tumor therapy could lie in the simultaneous targeting of these pathways using extracellular and intracellular targets and biomarkers. With this aim in mind, we evaluated the role of thioredoxin 1, a key redox regulator, and CD30, a cell membrane receptor, in immune regulation. Our results lead us to suggest that the combined use of these biomarkers provides more detailed information concerning the multiple pathways affected in disease and hence the possibility of more effective treatment.  相似文献   

20.
Zebrafish are a valuable vertebrate model to study carcinogenesis, but noninvasive imaging is challenging because adult fish are not transparent. Here we show that tumors could be readily detected in vivo using high-resolution microscopic ultrasound in zebrafish. We successfully obtained tissue perfusion calculations and cellular aspirates, and analyzed tumor progression and response to treatment. Ultrasound biomicroscopy allows longitudinal studies of tumor development and real-time assessment of therapeutic effects in zebrafish.  相似文献   

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