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Dynamic bioluminescence imaging for quantitative tumour burden assessment using IV or IP administration of D: -luciferin: effect on intensity, time kinetics and repeatability of photon emission

Authors :
Tony Lahoutte
Cindy Peleman
Christian Vanhove
Axel Bossuyt
Vicky Caveliers
Karine Breckpot
Jacob Verschueren
Marleen Keyaerts
Tomas Bos
Lea Olive Tchouate-Gainkam
Medical Imaging and Physical Sciences
Immunology and Microbiology
Hematology
Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy
Physiology
Laboratory of Molecullar and Cellular Therapy
Source :
European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Springer Verlag, 2008.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: In vivo bioluminescence imaging (BLI) is a promising technique for non-invasive tumour imaging. D: -luciferin can be administrated intraperitonealy or intravenously. This will influence its availability and, therefore, the bioluminescent signal. The aim of this study is to compare the repeatability of BLI measurement after IV versus IP administration of D: -luciferin and assess the correlation between photon emission and histological cell count both in vitro and in vivo. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Fluc-positive R1M cells were subcutaneously inoculated in nu/nu mice. Dynamic BLI was performed after IV or IP administration of D: -luciferin. Maximal photon emission (PE(max)) was calculated. For repeatability assessment, every acquisition was repeated after 4 h and analysed using Bland-Altman method. A second group of animals was serially imaged, alternating IV and IP administration up to 21 days. When mice were killed, PE(max) after IV administration was correlated with histological cell number. RESULTS: The coefficients of repeatability were 80.2% (IV) versus 95.0% (IP). Time-to-peak is shorter, and its variance lower for IV (p < 0.0001). PE(max) was 5.6 times higher for IV. A trend was observed towards lower photon emission per cell in larger tumours. CONCLUSION: IV administration offers better repeatability and better sensitivity when compared to IP. In larger tumours, multiple factors may contribute to underestimation of tumour burden. It might, therefore, be beneficial to test novel therapeutics on small tumours to enable an accurate evaluation of tumour burden.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16197070
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f41cfac5b2d0a384b106b6c03486dc93
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00259-007-0664-2