4.6 Article

Multimodality imaging for vertebral metastases in a rat osteolytic model

Journal

CLINICAL ORTHOPAEDICS AND RELATED RESEARCH
Volume -, Issue 454, Pages 230-236

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1097/01.blo.0000238787.44349.eb

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Imaging modalities facilitate the detection of early bony metastases. Few studies specifically address vertebral metastases in animal models for preclinical (early, asymptomatic) disease. We performed intracardiac injection of human breast cancer (MT-1) cells in 35 athymic nude rats. We evaluated potential temporal differences in appendicular versus axial metastases as detectable by longitudinal in vivo conventional radiography (ie, fine detail radiography and two-dimensional fluoroscopy). We compared bioluminescent reporter imaging with conventional radiographs in the detection of vertebral metastasis, and compared bioluminescent imaging with subsequent ex vivo microcomputed tomography analysis of osteolysis. The mean survival was 25 days in the animals that had metastases develop. Conventional radiographs identified appendicular osteolysis by 14 days; however, vertebral osteolysis was identified late in the metastatic spread (Days 25-28). Bioluminescence imaging was more sensitive in earlier detection of vertebral lesions in all imaged animals at Day 21, which corresponded to microcomputed tomography evaluation of osteolysis. Conventional radiographs do not appear useful for early detection of vertebral metastasis. Early identification of metastasis is important when considering the use of this model to evaluate therapeutic outcomes directed toward vertebral metastasis.

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