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Medical Imaging Workshop Molecular Imaging
Marcelo Tatit Sapienza INFIERI Summer School Intelligent signal processing for FrontIER Research and Industry
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Molecular Imaging Overview Imaging Modalities
Clinical Applications – e.g. breast cancer
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Molecular Imaging In vivo Imaging MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
visualisation, characterization and quantification of normal / pathological biological processes at the cellular and molecular level Molecular Imaging emerged as a discipline at the intersection of molecular biology and in vivo imaging
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MOLECULAR BIOLOGY Molecular paradigm of diseases Abnormal cells with
pathological phenotypes Molecular expression
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Hallmarks of cancer – Cell 2000
Hanahan & Weinberg
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Probes / ligands may be detected and allow
Abnormal cells with pathological phenotypes Molecular expression Probes / ligands may be detected and allow Therapy with labeled compounds Diagnosis Identification of targets for drugs Therapy response Therapy planning
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BASIC / PRECLINICAL RESEARCH CLINICAL APPLICATIONS
Molecular Imaging BASIC / PRECLINICAL RESEARCH Study of mechanisms of disease development and progression Detection and activity of receptors and pathways Pharmacokinetics / pharmacodynamics of target drugs CLINICAL APPLICATIONS Understanding pathophysiological mechanisms Diagnosis / Staging Response to target drugs / individualized therapies
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Translational research
Preclinical Molecular Target Identification Development of ligands Experimental / preclinical evaluation Clinical Image in humans validation Approval by regulatory agencies Clinical application
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Translational research
from BENCH to BEDSIDE to public health In a medical research context, it aims to "translate" findings in fundamental research into medical practice and meaningful health outcomes
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Molecular Imaging Overview Imaging Modalities
Clinical Applications – e.g. breast cancer
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Imaging Modalities Optical systems Nuclear Medicine: PET / SPECT
MRI Ultrasonography Computed tomography Differences in Spatial resolution Depth of evaluation Ionizing / non-ionizing radiation Available molecular markers or probes Detection threshold
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Imaging modalities Willmann Nature Reviews 2008
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Imaging modalities Optical Imaging: lower cost high-throughput screening for targets low depth penetration limited clinical translation Nuclear Medicine: higher cost than optical unlimited depth penetration clinical translation MRI: high resolution and soft tissue contrast / cost and imaging time US: high spatial and temporal resolution / low cost / limited targets CT: high spatial resolution / no target specific imaging Willmann Nature Reviews 2008
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Spectrum of wavelenghts
Eletromagnetic radiation MRI Optical CT / NM High energy Low energy Infra red Ultra violet
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Optical Imaging fluorescence and bioluminescence Reporter gene
Green fluorescent protein Near Infrared fluorphores (NIR) Reporter gene (luciferase) Prescher Current Opinion in Chemical Biology 2010
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NM Radiopharmaceuticals
radiolabeled molecules designed for in vivo application: PHARMACEUTICAL= molecular structure determining the fate of the compound within the organism RADIO= radioactive nuclide responsible for a signal detectable outside of the organism e.g. technetium-99m half life 6 hours gamma-ray photon 140 keV
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Scintillation camara Sorenson and Phelps, W.B.Saunders
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SPECT Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography
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Positron emitters Nuclides half life Positron: F-18 110 min
C min N min O min Ga min Rb min Positron: Same mass as electron opposite electrical charge annihilation generates a pair of gamma-ray photons – 180º
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PET Zanzonico Semin Nucl Med 2004
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SPECT PET 511 keV 140 keV SPECT / CT PET / CT
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PET SPECT PET > SPECT Spatial resolution (human studies)
Temporal resolution Sensitivity Cost
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Molecular Imaging Requirements
Imaging equipment Target selection Development of imaging probe / tracer
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Development of in vivo probes
< 5% of in vitro targets allow development of an in vivo tracer High TARGET concentration Affinity and specificity Absence of biological barriers (i.e. endothelium, blood brain barrier, ...) Stable labeling of compound
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Development of in vivo probes
< 5% of in vitro targets allow development of an in vivo tracer High TARGET activity / concentration Affinity and specificity Absence of biological barriers (i.e. endothelium, blood brain barrier, ...) Stable labeling of compound Low BACKGROUND activity Non-specific accumulation, Circulating or interstitial activity Renal or hepatic elimination
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Development of in vivo probes
< 5% of in vitro targets allow development of an in vivo tracer High TARGET activity / concentration Affinity and specificity Absence of biological barriers (i.e. endothelium, blood brain barrier, ...) Stable labeling of compound Low BACKGROUND activity Non-specific accumulation, Circulating or interstitial activity Renal or hepatic elimination Signal amplification Cell trapping Enzymatic conversion "Reporter" molecules: fluorescence, radiation, magnetic
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18FDG fluorodeoxyglucose = glucose analogue
EXAMPLE: 18FDG fluorodeoxyglucose = glucose analogue Transport (Glut) Phosphorylation (hexokinase) Metabolism
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MOST TUMORS: Increased Aerobic glycolysis (Warburg effect )
Phenotype common to most tumors Lower production of energy / mol X NADPH Production - Synthesis Hypoxia and acidosis select cells resistant to apoptosis Acid pH associated with invasion Vander Heiden Understanding the Warburg Effect Science 2009
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Hanahan & Weinberg Cell 2011
The same authors revisited the main molecular factors related to cancer, increased glycolisis is part of deregulated cellular energetics
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Molecular Imaging Overview Imaging Modalities
Clinical Applications – e.g. breast cancer
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Breast cancer Brazil Most incident in women ~ 50 /100,000
new cases ( 2014 – INCA ) deaths: ( 2011 – SIM ) 5 y survival ~ 60 % LOBULAR DUCTAL
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Breast cancer Staging PROGNOSIS and CONDUCT
- T 1 < 2 cm T cm T3 > 5 cm T4 thoracic wall / skin - N0, 1 axillary I-II mobile, N2 axillary fixed or int.thoracic, N3 infra (III) / supraclavicular / axillary+int. thoracic - Metastases M0, M1 AJCC Cancer Staging Manual. 7th ed. 2010, PROGNOSIS and CONDUCT Therapy choices considers also : Clinical conditions, Age , Menopause, Histology of the tumor Hormone Receptors and HER2
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Hormone and Growth Factor Receptors expression variation
PREDICTIVE biomarker = susceptibility of the tumor before indicating the therapy
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personalized cancer therapy
BIOPSY: TU hormone receptor ++ susceptible to treatment with drugs that blocks either the estrogen receptors or hormonal synthesis Biomarker-driven personalized cancer therapy Precision medicine It is well known that gene expression may vary in different areas of the same tumor in a single patient. This publication from 2012 shows a primary renal cell tumor with differences in tumor grade from well differentiated to undifferentiated tumor – the metastases may also present marked heterogeneity. This heterogeneity results from the interaction of the tumor cells with its surrounding, acting in a Darwinian selection of clones, form which some are capable of dissemination and metastatic progpagation, others may be quiescent but resistant to a specific therapy, others may act as tumor stem cells. BUT…
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Establishing genetic and molecular profile by biopsy may not be sufficient:
Tumor heterogeneity Gerlinger, Intratumor heterogeneity NEJM 2012
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target = hormone receptor
18FES – FLUOROESTRADIOL target = hormone receptor FDG FES FDG post-therapy PREDICTIVE biomarker in breast cancer ( indicates susceptibility to treatment ) Linden JCO 2006
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18FES – FLUORO ESTRADIOL FDG FES FDG post-therapy Linden JCO 2006
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PET- FDG in the metabolic evaluation after lymphoma chemotherapy
EARLY RESPONSE biomarker = post-therapy prognosis PET- FDG in the metabolic evaluation after lymphoma chemotherapy Reduce or increase # chemotherapy cycles Change / add therapy Kasamon JNM 2007
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18F-FES – FLUOROTHYMIDINE target = DNA synthesis
uptake after 1st cycle identifies responders ( p ) - ( n= 15 ) EARLY RESPONSE biomarker in breast cancer Crippa F Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging 2015
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18F-FES – FLUORO THYMIDINE
EARLY RESPONSE biomarker in breast cancer uptake after 1st cycle identifies responders ( p ) - ( n= 15 ) Crippa F Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging 2015
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Conclusion Molecular imaging is a multidiciplinary field in the intersection of molecular biology and in vivo imaging Main pillars of MI are : Use of imaging modalities with different performances Development of probes/ligands detectable in vivo MI is part of translational research and may be applied for biomarker-driven personalized therapy ( precision medicine )
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Thank you !
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