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Evaluation of the anti‐vascular effects of combretastatin in rodent tumours by dynamic contrast enhanced MRI
104
Citations
16
References
2002
Year
EngineeringOncologic ImagingTumour Blood FlowMagnetic Resonance ImagingBlood FlowOncologyRodent TumoursRadiopharmaceutical TherapyAnti‐vascular EffectsRadiation OncologyNuclear MedicineCancer ResearchRadiologyBlood Flow ChangesDynamic ContrastContrast AgentMri-guided Radiation TherapyPharmacologyTumor MicroenvironmentMedicine
The anti-vascular effects of the tubulin binding agent, disodium combretastatin A-4 3-O-phosphate (CA-4-P), have been investigated in the rat P22 carcinosarcoma by measurements of radiolabelled iodoantipyrine uptake and dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI. The iodoantipyrine estimates of absolute tumour blood flow showed a reduction from 0.35 to 0.04 ml g(-1) min(-1) 6 h after 10 mg kg(-1) CA-4-P and to <0.01 ml g(-1) min(-1) after 100 mg kg(-1). Tumour blood flow recovered to control values 24 h after 10 mg kg(-1) CA-4-P, but there was no recovery by 24 h after the higher dose. Dynamic contrast-enhanced MR images were obtained at 4.7 T, following injection of 0.1 mmol kg(-1) Gd-DTPA and analysed assuming a model arterial input function. A parameter, K(trans), which is related to blood flow rate and permeability of the tumour vasculature to Gd-DTPA, was calculated from the uptake data. K(trans) showed a reduction from 0.34 to 0.11 min(-1) 6 h after 10 mg kg(-1) CA-4-P and to 0.07 min(-1) after 100 mg kg(-1). Although the magnitude of changes in K(trans) was smaller than that in tumour blood flow, the time course and dose-dependency patterns were very similar. The apparent extravascular extracellular volume fraction, nu(e), showed a four-fold reduction 6 h after 100 mg kg(-1) CA-4-P, possibly associated with vascular shutdown within large regions of the tumour. These results suggest that K(trans) values for Gd-DTPA uptake into tumours could be a useful non-invasive indicator of blood flow changes induced by anti-vascular agents such as combretastatin.
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