PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Unsupervised deconvolution of dynamic imaging reveals intratumor vascular heterogeneity and repopulation dynamics.

  • Li Chen,
  • Peter L Choyke,
  • Niya Wang,
  • Robert Clarke,
  • Zaver M Bhujwalla,
  • Elizabeth M C Hillman,
  • Ge Wang,
  • Yue Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0112143
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. e112143

Abstract

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With the existence of biologically distinctive malignant cells originated within the same tumor, intratumor functional heterogeneity is present in many cancers and is often manifested by the intermingled vascular compartments with distinct pharmacokinetics. However, intratumor vascular heterogeneity cannot be resolved directly by most in vivo dynamic imaging. We developed multi-tissue compartment modeling (MTCM), a completely unsupervised method of deconvoluting dynamic imaging series from heterogeneous tumors that can improve vascular characterization in many biological contexts. Applying MTCM to dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging of breast cancers revealed characteristic intratumor vascular heterogeneity and therapeutic responses that were otherwise undetectable. MTCM is readily applicable to other dynamic imaging modalities for studying intratumor functional and phenotypic heterogeneity, together with a variety of foreseeable applications in the clinic.