Molecular Imaging (Jun 2020)

Real-Time Fluorescence Imaging Using Indocyanine Green to Assess Therapeutic Effects of Near-Infrared Photoimmunotherapy in Tumor Model Mice

  • Adrian Rosenberg,
  • Daiki Fujimura MD,
  • Ryuhei Okada MD, PhD,
  • Aki Furusawa PhD,
  • Fuyuki Inagaki MD, PhD,
  • Hiroaki Wakiyama MD, PhD,
  • Takuya Kato MD, PhD,
  • Peter L. Choyke MD,
  • Hisataka Kobayashi MD, PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/1536012120934965
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19

Abstract

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Background: Near-infrared photoimmunotherapy (NIR-PIT) is a cancer therapy that causes an increase in tumor perfusion, a phenomenon termed the super-enhanced permeability and retention effect. Currently, in vivo treatment efficacy of NIR-PIT is observable days after treatment, but monitoring would be improved by more acute detection of intratumor change. Fluorescence imaging may detect increased tumor perfusion immediately after treatment. Methods: In the first experiment, athymic nude mouse models bearing unilateral subcutaneous flank tumors were treated with either NIR-PIT or laser therapy only. In the second experiment, mice bearing bilateral flank tumors were treated with NIR-PIT only on the left-sided tumor. In both groups, immediately after treatment, indocyanine green was injected at different doses intravenously, and mice were monitored with the Shimadzu LIGHTVISION fluorescence imaging system for 1 hour. Results: Tumor-to-background ratio of fluorescence intensity increased over the 60 minutes of monitoring in treated mice but did not vary significantly in control mice. Tumor-to-background ratio was highest in the 1 mg kg −1 and 0.3 mg kg −1 doses. In mice with bilateral tumors, tumor-to-untreated tumor ratio increased similarly. Conclusions: Acute changes in tumor perfusion after NIR-PIT can be detected by real-time fluorescence imaging.