4.8 Article

3D molecular MR imaging of liver fibrosis and response to rapamycin therapy in a bile duct ligation rat model

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEPATOLOGY
Volume 63, Issue 3, Pages 689-696

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhep.2015.04.029

Keywords

Liver fibrosis; Type I collagen; Molecular imaging; Non-invasive; MRI; EP-3533; Bile duct ligation (BDL)

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute [CA140861, DK104956]
  2. National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering [EB009062]
  3. Innovation Award from Sanofi

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Background & Aims: Liver biopsy, the gold standard for assessing liver fibrosis, suffers from limitations due to sampling error and invasiveness. There is therefore a critical need for methods to non-invasively quantify fibrosis throughout the entire liver. The goal of this study was to use molecular Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) of Type I collagen to non-invasively image liver fibrosis and assess response to rapamycin therapy. Methods: Liver fibrosis was induced in rats by bile duct ligation (BDL). MRI was performed 4, 10, or 18 days following BDL. Some BDL rats were treated daily with rapamycin starting on day 4 and imaged on day 18. A three-dimensional (3D) inversion recovery MRI sequence was used to quantify the change in liver longitudinal relaxation rate (Delta R1) induced by the collagen-targeted probe EP-3533. Liver tissue was subjected to pathologic scoring of fibrosis and analyzed for Sirius Red staining and hydroxyproline content. Results: Delta R1 increased significantly with time following BDL compared to controls in agreement with ex vivo measures of increasing fibrosis. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis demonstrated the ability of Delta R1 to detect liver fibrosis and distinguish intermediate and late stages of fibrosis. EP-3533 MRI correctly characterized the response to rapamycin in 11 out of 12 treated rats compared to the standard of collagen proportional area (CPA). 3D MRI enabled characterization of disease heterogeneity throughout the whole liver. Conclusions: EP-3533 allowed for staging of liver fibrosis, assessment of response to rapamycin therapy, and demonstrated the ability to detect heterogeneity in liver fibrosis. (C) 2015 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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