PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Multi-Modal Imaging in a Mouse Model of Orthotopic Lung Cancer.

  • Priya Patel,
  • Tatsuya Kato,
  • Hideki Ujiie,
  • Hironobu Wada,
  • Daiyoon Lee,
  • Hsin-Pei Hu,
  • Kentaro Hirohashi,
  • Jin Young Ahn,
  • Jinzi Zheng,
  • Kazuhiro Yasufuku

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0161991
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 9
p. e0161991

Abstract

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BACKGROUND:Investigation of CF800, a novel PEGylated nano-liposomal imaging agent containing indocyanine green (ICG) and iohexol, for real-time near infrared (NIR) fluorescence and computed tomography (CT) image-guided surgery in an orthotopic lung cancer model in nude mice. METHODS:CF800 was intravenously administered into 13 mice bearing the H460 orthotopic human lung cancer. At 48 h post-injection (peak imaging agent accumulation time point), ex vivo NIR and CT imaging was performed. A clinical NIR imaging system (SPY®, Novadaq) was used to measure fluorescence intensity of tumor and lung. Tumor-to-background-ratios (TBR) were calculated in inflated and deflated states. The mean Hounsfield unit (HU) of lung tumor was quantified using the CT data set and a semi-automated threshold-based method. Histological evaluation using H&E, the macrophage marker F4/80 and the endothelial cell marker CD31, was performed, and compared to the liposomal fluorescence signal obtained from adjacent tissue sections. RESULTS:The fluorescence TBR measured when the lung is in the inflated state (2.0 ± 0.58) was significantly greater than in the deflated state (1.42 ± 0.380 (n = 7, p<0.003). Mean fluorescent signal in tumor was highly variable across samples, (49.0 ± 18.8 AU). CT image analysis revealed greater contrast enhancement in lung tumors (a mean increase of 110 ± 57 HU) when CF800 is administered compared to the no contrast enhanced tumors (p = 0.0002). CONCLUSION:Preliminary data suggests that the high fluorescence TBR and CT tumor contrast enhancement provided by CF800 may have clinical utility in localization of lung cancer during CT and NIR image-guided surgery.