4.7 Review

Molecular imaging of hypoxia

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
Volume 49, Issue -, Pages 129S-148S

Publisher

SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC
DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.107.045914

Keywords

hypoxia; F-18-FMISO; Cu-ATSM; biomarkers; bioluminescence; MRI

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [P01 CA042045, U24 CA126608, P01 CA42045] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NCRR NIH HHS [S10 RR17229, P41-RR02584] Funding Source: Medline

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Hypoxia, a condition of insufficient O-2 to support metabolism, occurs when the vascular supply is interrupted, as in stroke or myocardial infarction, or when a tumor outgrows its vascular supply. When otherwise healthy tissues lose their O-2 supply acutely, the cells usually die, whereas when cells gradually become hypoxic they adapt by up-regulating the production of numerous proteins that promote their survival. These proteins slow the rate of growth, switch the mitochondria to glycolysis, stimulate growth of new vasculature, inhibit apoptosis, and promote metastatic spread. The consequence of these changes is that patients with hypoxic tumors invariably experience poor outcome to treatment. This has led the molecular imaging community to develop assays for hypoxia in patients, including regional measurements from O-2 electrodes placed under CT guidance, several nuclear medicine approaches with imaging agents that accumulate with an inverse relationship to O-2, MRI methods that measure either oxygenation directly or lactate production as a consequence of hypoxia, and optical methods with NIR and bioluminescence. The advantages and disadvantages of these approaches are reviewed, along with the individual strategies for validating different imaging methods. Ultimately the proof of value is in the clinical performance to predict outcome, select an appropriate cohort of patients to benefit from a hypoxia-directed treatment, or plan radiation fields that result in better local control. Hypoxia imaging in support of molecular medicine has become an important success story over the last decade and provides a model and some important lessons for development of new molecular imaging probes or techniques.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available