BioTechniques (Apr 2008)

Noninvasive magnetic resonance imaging of the development of individual colon cancer tumors in rat liver

  • Olaf R.F. Mook,
  • Ard Jonker,
  • Aart C. Strang,
  • Andor Veltien,
  • Giulio Gambarota,
  • Wilma M. Frederiks,
  • Arend Heerschap,
  • Cornelis J.F. Van Noorden

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2144/000112695
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 44, no. 4
pp. 529 – 535

Abstract

Read online

Monitoring tumor development is essential for the understanding of mechanisms involved in tumor progression and to determine efficacy of therapy. One of the evolving approaches is longitudinal noninvasive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of tumors in experimental models. We applied high-resolution MRI at 7 Tesla to study the development of colon cancer tumors in rat liver. MRI acquisition was triggered to the respiratory cycle to minimize motion artifacts. A special radio frequency (RF) coil was designed to acquire detailed T1-weighted and T2-weighted images of the liver. T2-weighted images identified hyperintense lesions representing tumors with a minimum diameter of 2 mm, enabling the determination of growth rates and morphological aspects of individual tumors. It is concluded that high-resolution MRI using a dedicated RF coil and triggering to the respiratory cycle is an excellent tool for quantitative and morphological analysis of individual diffusely distributed tumors throughout the liver. However, at present, MRI requires expensive equipment and expertise and is a time-consuming methodology. Therefore, it should preferably be used for dedicated applications rather than for high-throughput assessment of total tumor load in animals.