Jeff Folz , Janggun Jo , Maria E. Gonzalez , Ahmad Eido , Tianqu Zhai , Roberta Caruso , Celina G. Kleer , Xueding Wang , Raoul Kopelman
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Oxygen is a small molecule that is nearly universally present in biological tissues and plays a critical role in the effectiveness of radiotherapies by reacting with DNA radicals and subsequently impairing cellular repair of double strand breaks.</p><p>Techniques for measuring oxygen in biological tissues often use blood oxygen saturation to approximate the oxygen partial pressure in surrounding tissues despite the complex, nonlinear, and dynamic relationship between these two separate oxygen populations.</p></div><div><h3>Methods and materials</h3><p>We combined a directly oxygen-sensitive, tumor-targeted, chemical contrast nanoelement with the photoacoustic lifetime-based (PALT) oxygen imaging technique to obtain image maps of oxygen in breast cancer tumors in vivo. The oxygen levels of patient-derived xenografts in a mouse model were characterized before and after a course of radiotherapy.</p></div><div><h3>Results</h3><p>We show that, independent of tumor size, radiotherapy induced an increase in the overall oxygenation levels of the tumor. Further, this increase in the oxygenation of the tumor significantly correlated with a positive response to radiotherapy, as demonstrated by a reduction in tumor volume over the twenty-day monitoring period following therapy and histological staining.</p></div><div><h3>Conclusion</h3><p>Our PALT imaging presented here is simple, fast, and non-invasive. Facilized by the PALT approach, imaging of tumor reoxygenation may be utilized as a simple, early indicator for evaluating cancer response to radiotherapy. Further characterization of the reoxygenation degree, temporal onset, and possible theragnostic implications are warranted.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":375,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology","volume":"21 ","pages":"Article 100241"},"PeriodicalIF":3.2610,"publicationDate":"2024-04-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666469024000162/pdfft?md5=7689613c44cf27f4a26f47fc73453186&pid=1-s2.0-S2666469024000162-main.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Photoacoustic lifetime oxygen imaging of radiotherapy-induced tumor reoxygenation In Vivo\",\"authors\":\"Jeff Folz , Janggun Jo , Maria E. Gonzalez , Ahmad Eido , Tianqu Zhai , Roberta Caruso , Celina G. 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The oxygen levels of patient-derived xenografts in a mouse model were characterized before and after a course of radiotherapy.</p></div><div><h3>Results</h3><p>We show that, independent of tumor size, radiotherapy induced an increase in the overall oxygenation levels of the tumor. Further, this increase in the oxygenation of the tumor significantly correlated with a positive response to radiotherapy, as demonstrated by a reduction in tumor volume over the twenty-day monitoring period following therapy and histological staining.</p></div><div><h3>Conclusion</h3><p>Our PALT imaging presented here is simple, fast, and non-invasive. Facilized by the PALT approach, imaging of tumor reoxygenation may be utilized as a simple, early indicator for evaluating cancer response to radiotherapy. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
目的癌症的早期检测和诊断对于取得积极的治疗效果至关重要。能够为临床医生提供特定疗程结果线索的生物标记物是非常需要的。氧是一种几乎普遍存在于生物组织中的小分子,它能与 DNA 自由基发生反应,进而影响细胞对双链断裂的修复,因此对放射治疗的效果起着至关重要的作用。测量生物组织中氧含量的技术通常使用血氧饱和度来近似测量周围组织中的氧分压,尽管这两种不同的氧含量之间存在着复杂、非线性和动态的关系。方法与材料我们将一种直接对氧敏感的肿瘤靶向化学对比纳米元素与基于光声寿命(PALT)的氧成像技术相结合,获得了体内乳腺癌肿瘤中氧含量的图像图。结果表明,与肿瘤大小无关,放疗会引起肿瘤整体氧含量的增加。此外,肿瘤氧合水平的提高与放疗的积极反应密切相关,放疗后二十天监测期内肿瘤体积的缩小和组织学染色证明了这一点。通过 PALT 方法,肿瘤复氧成像可作为评估癌症对放疗反应的一个简单、早期指标。我们有必要对复氧程度、时间起始和可能的治疗意义进行进一步的描述。
Photoacoustic lifetime oxygen imaging of radiotherapy-induced tumor reoxygenation In Vivo
Purpose
Early detection and diagnosis of cancer is critical for achieving positive therapeutic outcomes. Biomarkers that can provide clinicians with clues to the outcome of a given therapeutic course are highly desired. Oxygen is a small molecule that is nearly universally present in biological tissues and plays a critical role in the effectiveness of radiotherapies by reacting with DNA radicals and subsequently impairing cellular repair of double strand breaks.
Techniques for measuring oxygen in biological tissues often use blood oxygen saturation to approximate the oxygen partial pressure in surrounding tissues despite the complex, nonlinear, and dynamic relationship between these two separate oxygen populations.
Methods and materials
We combined a directly oxygen-sensitive, tumor-targeted, chemical contrast nanoelement with the photoacoustic lifetime-based (PALT) oxygen imaging technique to obtain image maps of oxygen in breast cancer tumors in vivo. The oxygen levels of patient-derived xenografts in a mouse model were characterized before and after a course of radiotherapy.
Results
We show that, independent of tumor size, radiotherapy induced an increase in the overall oxygenation levels of the tumor. Further, this increase in the oxygenation of the tumor significantly correlated with a positive response to radiotherapy, as demonstrated by a reduction in tumor volume over the twenty-day monitoring period following therapy and histological staining.
Conclusion
Our PALT imaging presented here is simple, fast, and non-invasive. Facilized by the PALT approach, imaging of tumor reoxygenation may be utilized as a simple, early indicator for evaluating cancer response to radiotherapy. Further characterization of the reoxygenation degree, temporal onset, and possible theragnostic implications are warranted.