Liver metastasis is a clinically significant contributor to the mortality associated with melanoma, colon, and breast cancer. Preclinical mouse models are essential to the study of liver metastasis, yet their utility has been limited by the inability to study this dynamic process in a noninvasive and longitudinal manner. This study shows that three-dimensional high-frequency ultrasound can be used to noninvasively track the growth of liver metastases and evaluate potential chemotherapeutics in experimental liver metastasis models. Liver metastases produced by mesenteric vein injection of B16F1 (murine melanoma), PAP2 (murine H-ras-transformed fibroblast), HT-29 (human colon carcinoma), and MDA-MB-435/HAL (human breast carcinoma) cells were identified and tracked longitudinally. Tumor size and location were verified by histologic evaluation. Tumor volumes were calculated from the three-dimensional volumetric data, with individual liver metastases showing exponential growth. The importance of volumetric imaging to reduce uncertainty in tumor volume measurement was shown by comparing threedimensional segmented volumes with volumes estimated from diameter measurements and the assumption of an ellipsoid shape. The utility of high-frequency ultrasound imaging in the evaluation of therapeutic interventions was established with a doxorubicin treatment trial. These results show that three-dimensional high-frequency ultrasound imaging may be particularly well suited for the quantitative assessment of metastatic progression and the evaluation of chemotherapeutics in preclinical liver metastasis models.
Overall, the binary classification results (tumor versus normal tissue) were more promising than tumor grade assessment. Combinations of advanced parameters can further improve the separation of tumors from normal tissue compared to the use of linear regression parameters. While the linear regression parameters were sufficient for characterizing breast tumors and normal breast tissues, advanced parameters and their textural features were required to better characterize tumor subtypes.
Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in adult men in North America. Preclinical studies of prostate cancer employ genetically engineered mouse models, because prostate cancer does not occur naturally in rodents. Widespread application of these models has been limited because autopsy was the only reliable method to evaluate treatment efficacy in longitudinal studies. This article reports the first use of three-dimensional ultrasound microimaging for measuring tumor progression in a genetically engineered mouse model, the 94-amino acid prostate secretory protein gene-directed transgenic prostate cancer model. Qualitative comparisons of three-dimensional ultrasound images with serial histology sections of prostate tumors show the ability of ultrasound to accurately depict the size and shape of malignant masses in live mice. Ultrasound imaging identified tumors ranging from 2.4 to 14 mm maximum diameter. The correlation coefficient of tumor diameter measurements done in vivo with three-dimensional ultrasound and at autopsy was 0.998. Prospective tumor detection sensitivity and specificity were both >90% when diagnoses were based on repeated ultrasound examinations done on separate days. Representative exponential growth curves constructed via longitudinal ultrasound imaging indicated volume doubling times of 5 and 13 days for two prostate tumors. Compared with other microimaging and molecular imaging modalities, the application of three-dimensional ultrasound imaging to prostate cancer in mice showed advantages, such as high spatial resolution and contrast in soft tissue, fast and uncomplicated protocols, and portable and economical equipment that will likely enable ultrasound to become a new microimaging modality for mouse preclinical trial studies. (Cancer Res 2005; 65(14): 6337-45)
Frequency analysis of the photoacoustic radiofrequency signals and oxygen saturation estimates were used to monitor the in-vivo response of a novel, thermosensitive liposome treatment. The liposome encapsulated doxorubicin (HaT-DOX) releasing it rapidly (<20 s) when the tumor was exposed to mild hyperthermia (43 °C). Photoacoustic imaging (VevoLAZR, 750/850 nm, 40 MHz) of EMT-6 breast cancer tumors was performed 30 min pre- and post-treatment and up to 7 days post-treatment (at 2/5/24 h timepoints). HaT-DOX-treatment responders exhibited on average a 22% drop in oxygen saturation 2 h post-treatment and a decrease (45% at 750 nm and 73% at 850 nm) in the slope of the normalized PA frequency spectra. The spectral slope parameter correlated with treatment-induced hemorrhaging which increased the optical absorber effective size via interstitial red blood cell leakage. Combining frequency analysis and oxygen saturation estimates differentiated treatment responders from non-responders/control animals by probing the treatment-induced structural changes of blood vessel.
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