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Technique
predicts Breast Cancer Chemotherapy outcome
Newswise — Chemotherapy is an integral part
of modern cancer treatment, but it’s not
always effective. Successful chemotherapy
depends on the ability of anticancer drugs
to escape from the bloodstream through the
leaky blood vessels that often surround
tumors.
Predicting chemotherapy’s efficacy could
save thousands of individuals from
unnecessary toxicity and the often difficult
side effects of the treatments.
In a study published in the February issue
of the journal Radiology, researchers
describe a technique for determining the
“leakiness” of tumor blood vessels using a
simple digital mammography unit.
The researchers designed nanometer-sized
capsules containing a contrast agent that
could only leak into tumors with blood
vessels that were growing and therefore
leaky.
The digital mammography-based quantification
of “leakiness” is closely correlated to the
ability of a clinically approved
chemotherapy agent to enter the tumor,
allowing the researchers to predict the
agent’s therapeutic efficacy.
“We developed a quantitative way to measure
the leakiness of the blood vessels, which is
directly linked to the amount of drug that
gets to the cancer and in turn determines
effectiveness,” said Ravi Bellamkonda, a
professor in the Wallace H. Coulter
Department of Biomedical Engineering at
Georgia Tech and Emory University.
“By simply measuring how much contrast agent
reaches the tumor, we can predict how much
of a clinically approved chemotherapeutic
will reach the tumor, allowing physicians to
personalize the dose and predict
effectiveness.”
In some cases, one chemotherapy drug may not
be effective in treating the tumor, but this
new technique allows oncologists to
investigate other drugs sooner since they
know the drug is reaching the tumor.
Studies are currently underway to determine
if mammography can predict the optimal dose
of a wide range of breast cancer
chemotherapeutics.
Bellamkonda and Coulter Department
postdoctoral fellow Efstathios Karathanasis
collaborated on this study with Ioannis
Sechopoulos, an assistant professor in
radiology at Emory University; Andrew
Karellas, a former professor in the Emory
University Winship Cancer Institute
currently at the University of Massachusetts
Medical School; and Ananth Annapragada, an
associate professor of health information
sciences at the University of Texas,
Houston.
The project was funded by the National
Science Foundation and Georgia Cancer
Coalition.
For the study, a long-circulating
nanometer-scale liposomal capsule filled
with iodinated contrast agent was injected
into rats with six-day-old breast cancer
tumors.
For the next three days, the researchers
collected digital mammography images of the
animals and compared the pre- and
post-injection grayscale intensity values to
study the dynamics of how the contrast agent
accumulated in the tumor over time.
“During the three-day time course, some
tumors exhibited a rapid and significant
increase in image brightness, meaning the
contrast agent was accumulating in the
tumor, whereas other tumors showed a slow
and low increase,” said Bellamkonda, who is
also a Georgia Cancer Coalition
Distinguished Scholar.
While the brightness of the tumors in the
images changed significantly, no variations
were observed in non-tumor areas or in the
tumors of animals that did not receive the
contrast agent.
Immediately after the imaging was completed
and the leakiness of each individual cancer
vessel was quantified, the animals were
intravenously injected with a clinically
approved chemotherapy drug, liposomal
doxorubicin.
Results showed that the chemotherapeutic
drug slowed the progress of the tumor.
The variability in uptake of the contrast
agent by the tumors, as measured during the
three-day imaging sessions, provided an
accurate prognosis of the effect of
liposomal doxorubicin on tumor growth rate.
“When we plotted the post-treatment tumor
growth rate versus the intensity of
leakiness, there was a significant and
strong correlation,” noted Bellamkonda.
“The tumors in which the nanocarrier leaked
out and accumulated the most in the tumors
during the initial three-day test were the
ones that responded best to the treatment.”
To verify that the intensity changes in the
images were caused by the nanocarrier and
not endogenous changes in the tumor tissue,
liposomal probes tagged with a fluorescent
dye were injected into the animals. By
looking at histological tumor sections, the
researchers showed that the location of the
increased image brightness and the
fluorescent dye were the same.
“This study showed that higher uptake of the
probe by the tumor related to leakier
vasculature and suggested a better
therapeutic outcome of liposomal
doxorubicin,” said Bellamkonda.
“Imaging the integrity of the tumor
vasculature like this may allow cancer
treatment to be more patient-specific and
potentially spare patients from chemotherapy
if it is not going to be effective.”
While the goal of the study reported in the
journal was not to induce tumor regression,
the researchers plan to investigate whether
the liposomal probes can be used for this
purpose in the future.
To further develop and commercialize these
multifunctional probes, Bellamkonda and
Annapragada founded a start-up company
called Marval Biosciences, Inc.
The researchers also want to investigate
whether the leakiness of tumor vasculature
represents a parameter that is useful for
clinical diagnosis or tumor
characterization.
“We want to study the molecular basis for
blood vessel leakiness,” said Bellamkonda.
“We want to understand why there is
variation in leakiness and chemotherapy
effectiveness among individuals with tumors
of the same type, size and stage.”
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