Back to Search Start Over

Zonal image analysis of tumour vascular perfusion, hypoxia, and necrosis

Authors :
Scott F. Paoni
Ivan Ding
Bruce M. Fenton
B K Beauchamp
Source :
British Journal of Cancer
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2002.

Abstract

A number of laboratories are utilising both hypoxia and perfusion markers to spatially quantify tumour oxygenation and vascular distributions, and scientists are increasingly turning to automated image analysis methods to quantify such interrelationships. In these studies, the presence of regions of necrosis in the immunohistochemical sections remains a potentially significant source of error. In the present work, frozen MCa-4 mammary tumour sections were used to obtain a series of corresponding image montages. Total vessels were identified using CD31 staining, perfused vessels by DiOC7 staining, hypoxia by EF5/Cy3 uptake, and necrosis by haematoxylin and eosin staining. Our goal was to utilise image analysis techniques to spatially quantitate hypoxic marker binding as a function of distance from the nearest blood vessel. Several refinements to previous imaging methods are described: (1) hypoxia marker images are quantified in terms of their intensity levels, thus providing an analysis of the gradients in hypoxia with increasing distances from blood vessels, (2) zonal imaging masks are derived, which permit spatial sampling of images at precisely defined distances from blood vessels, as well as the omission of necrotic artifacts, (3) thresholding techniques are applied to omit holes in the tissue sections, and (4) distance mapping is utilised to define vascular spacing. British Journal of Cancer (2002) 86, 1831–1836. doi:10.1038/sj.bjc.6600343 www.bjcancer.com © 2002 Cancer Research UK

Details

ISSN :
15321827 and 00070920
Volume :
86
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British Journal of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3e8880c2e2948c0f9f392f7a1862b3fc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6600343