Physics and Imaging in Radiation Oncology (Jan 2023)

Imaging the tumour microenvironment in rectal cancer: Decline in tumour blood flow during radiotherapy predicts good outcome

  • Kine Mari Bakke,
  • Sebastian Meltzer,
  • Endre Grøvik,
  • Anne Negård,
  • Stein Harald Holmedal,
  • Lars Tore Gyland Mikalsen,
  • Arne Engebret Færden,
  • Lars Gustav Lyckander,
  • Frida Marie Ihle Julbø,
  • Atle Bjørnerud,
  • Kjell-Inge Gjesdal,
  • Anne Hansen Ree,
  • Kathrine Røe Redalen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25
p. 100417

Abstract

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Background and purpose: Measuring rectal tumour response to radiation is pivotal to restaging patients and for possibly stratification to a watch-and-wait strategy. Recognizing the importance of the tumour microenvironment, we investigated a less explored quantitative imaging marker assessing tumour blood flow (BF) for its potential to predict overall survival (OS). Materials and methods: 24 rectal cancer patients given curative-intent neoadjuvant radiotherapy underwent a multi-echo dynamic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sequence with gadolinium contrast for quantification of tumour BF before either 25x2 Gy (n = 18) with concomitant chemotherapy or 5x5 Gy (n = 6). CD34 staining of excised tumour tissue was performed and baseline blood samples were analysed for lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and angiopoietin-2 (ANGPT-2). Tumour volumes were measured before and after treatment. After subsequent surgery, ypTN scoring assessed tumour response. Cox regression for 5-year OS analysis and t-test for group comparisons were performed. Results: The change in tumour BF (ΔBF) during neoadjuvant radiotherapy was a significant marker of OS, whereas tumour stage and volume were not related to OS. All patients with >20 % decline in BF were long-term survivors. Separating cases in two groups based on ΔBF revealed that patients with increase or a low decrease had higher baseline LDH (p = 0.032) and ANGPT-2 (p = 0.028) levels. Conclusion: MRI-assessed tumour ΔBF during neoadjuvant treatment is a significant predictor of OS in rectal cancer patients, making ΔBF a potential quantitative imaging biomarker for treatment stratification. Blood LDH and ANGPT-2 indicate that non-responding tumours may have a hypoxic microenvironment resistant to radiotherapy.

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