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1.
Lab Anim ; 55(5): 472-477, 2021 Oct.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33884898

Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women worldwide. For high-risk women, contrast enhanced (CE)-magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is recommended as supplemental screening together with mammography. The development of new MRI contrast agents is an active field of research, which requires efficacy tests on appropriate preclinical pathological models. In this work, a refined method to orthotopically induce breast cancer in BALB/c mice was developed using ultrasound (US) as a guide for the precise localisation of the tumour induction site and to improve animal welfare. The method was coupled with CE-MRI to characterise the evolution of the tumoural lesion.


Mammography , Neoplasms , Animals , Contrast Media , Disease Models, Animal , Mice , Mice, Inbred BALB C , Ultrasonography, Interventional
2.
Oncotarget ; 11(24): 2310-2326, 2020 Jun 16.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32595830

Tumor-targeting contrast agents may facilitate resection of solid neoplasms during fluorescence-guided surgery. Preliminary safety and imaging efficacy of the near-infrared fluorescent probe DA364 were evaluated during surgical resection of spontaneous solid tumors in 24 dogs. Intra-operative imaging was performed in situ and on excised specimens to evaluate fluorescence intensities of tumor and adjacent tissues. After standard-of-care tumor resection, the wound bed was imaged again, and additional tissue was excised if residual fluorescence was detected. DA364 was well tolerated after intravenous administration. The median tumor-to-background ratio in situ for mammary tumors, mast cell tumors and sarcomas was 1.8 (range 1.2-3.9), 2.2 (range 1.0-5.6), and 4.2 (range 2.0-4.3), respectively. Qualitative intra-operative tumor identification was feasible in half of the cases. Remaining fluorescence was detected in four wound beds that contained residual disease, and in11 tumor-free wound beds, confirmed by histopathology. Overall, DA364 did not raise safety concerns and showed accumulation in different types of spontaneous tumors, showing potential to pinpoint residual disease. Larger clinical trials are necessary to select accurate dosing and imaging protocols for specific indications to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of the agent.

3.
Vet Rec ; 187(7): 273, 2020 Oct 03.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32345608

BACKGROUND: Near-infrared fluorescence (NIRF) imaging is a relatively novel technique that can aid surgeons during intraoperative tumour identification. METHODS: Nine canine oncology patients (five mammary gland tumours, three mast cell tumours and one melanoma) received intravenous indocyanine green (ICG). After 24 hours, tumours were resected and fluorescence intensities of tumours and surroundings were evaluated. Additional wound bed tissue was resected if residual fluorescence was present after tumour resection. Ex vivo, fluorescence-guided dissection was performed to separate tumour from surrounding tissue. RESULTS: Intraoperative NIRF-guided tumour delineation was feasible in four out of nine dogs. Wound bed imaging after tumour removal identified nine additional fluorescent lesions, of which four contained tumour tissue. One of these four true positive in vivo lesions was missed by standard-of-care inspection. Ex vivo fluorescence-guided tumour dissection showed a sensitivity of 72 per cent and a specificity of 80 per cent in discriminating between tumour and surrounding tissue. CONCLUSION: The value of ICG for intraoperative tumour delineation seems more limited than originally thought. Although NIRF imaging using ICG did identify remaining tumour tissue in the wound bed, a high false positive rate was also observed.


Dog Diseases/surgery , Indocyanine Green , Neoplasms/veterinary , Surgery, Computer-Assisted/veterinary , Animals , Dogs , Female , Fluorescence , Male , Neoplasms/surgery , Surgery, Computer-Assisted/methods
4.
Animal Model Exp Med ; 2(1): 58-63, 2019 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31016288

Meningioma in vivo research is hampered by the difficulty of establishing an easy and reproducible orthotopic model able to mimic the characteristics of a human meningioma. Moreover, leptomeningeal dissemination and high mortality are often associated with such orthotopical models, making them useless for clinical translation studies. An optimized method for inducing meningiomas in nude mice at two different sites is described in this paper and the high reproducibility and low mortality of the models are demonstrated. Skull base meningiomas were induced in the auditory meatus and convexity meningiomas were induced on the brain surface of 23 and 24 nude mice, respectively. Both models led to the development of a mass easily observable by imaging methods. Dynamic contrast enhanced MRI was used as a tool to monitor and characterize the pathology onset and progression. At the end of the study, histology was performed to confirm the neoplastic origin of the diseased mass.

5.
ChemMedChem ; 13(8): 824-834, 2018 04 23.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29442438

A dinuclear gadolinium(III) chelate containing two moieties of diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA), covalently conjugated to an analogue of deoxycholic acid, was synthesized and thoroughly characterized. A full relaxometric analysis was carried out, consisting of 1) the acquisition of nuclear magnetic resonance dispersion (NMRD) profiles in various media; 2) the study of binding affinity to serum albumin; 3) the measurement of 17 O transverse relaxation rate versus temperature, and 4) a transmetallation assay. In vivo biodistribution MRI studies at 1 T and blood pharmacokinetics assays were carried out in comparison with Gd-DTPA (Magnevist) and gadocoletic acid trisodium salt (B22956/1), two well-known Gd complexes that share the same chelating cage and the same deoxycholic acid residue of the Gd complex investigated herein ((GdDTPA)2 -Chol). High affinity for plasma protein and, in particular, the availability of more than one binding site, allows the complex to reach a fairly high relaxivity value in plasma (∼20 mm-1 s-1 , 20 MHz, 310 K) as well as to show unexpectedly enhanced properties of blood pooling, with an elimination half-life in rats approximately seven times longer than that of B22956/1.


Contrast Media/chemistry , Contrast Media/pharmacokinetics , Deoxycholic Acid/analogs & derivatives , Deoxycholic Acid/pharmacokinetics , Gadolinium DTPA/analogs & derivatives , Gadolinium DTPA/pharmacokinetics , Animals , Contrast Media/chemical synthesis , Contrast Media/metabolism , Deoxycholic Acid/chemical synthesis , Deoxycholic Acid/metabolism , Female , Gadolinium DTPA/chemical synthesis , Gadolinium DTPA/metabolism , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Serum Albumin/metabolism , Tissue Distribution
6.
Nanomedicine ; 13(2): 693-700, 2017 02.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27720928

The current study was performed to evaluate the in vivo efficiency of a new nano-sized contrast agent called paramagnetic Solid Lipid Nanoparticles, pSLNs, having promising relaxivity properties for Magnetic Resonance Imaging application. Good stability and stealth properties toward macrophage uptake have been demonstrated. An in vivo MRI study resulted in an improved signal enhancement in the tumor tissue particularly when folate as targeting ligand was used to decorate the nanoparticles surface. Afterward, the biodistribution of pSLNs in several organs was investigated. The accumulation of pSLNs in kidneys, femoral bones, spleen and brain was quite low while high tropism of pSLNs was found for the liver. In this regard, approaches to improve the rate of the hepatic clearance have been proposed.


Lipids , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Nanoparticles , Cell Line, Tumor , Humans , Tissue Distribution
7.
Int J Cancer ; 136(4): E117-26, 2015 Feb 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25156718

An increased prevalence of liver diseases such as hepatitis C and nonalcoholic fatty liver results in an augmented incidence of the most common form of liver cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). HCC is most often found in the cirrhotic liver and it can therefore be challenging to rely on anatomical information alone when diagnosing HCC. Valuable information on specific cellular metabolism can be obtained with high sensitivity thanks to an emerging magnetic resonance (MR) technique that uses 13C labeled hyperpolarized molecules. Our interest was to explore potential new high contrast metabolic markers of HCC using hyperpolarized 13C-MR. This work led to the identification of a class of substrates, low molecular weight ethyl-esters, which showed high specificity for carboxyl esterases and proved in many cases to possess good properties for signal enhancement. In particular, hyperpolarized [1,3-13C2 ]ethyl acetoacetate (EAA) was shown to provide a metabolic fingerprint of HCC. Using this substrate a liver cancer implanted in rats was diagnosed as a consequence of an ∼4 times higher metabolic substrate-to-product ratio than in the surrounding healthy tissue, (p=0.009). Unregulated cellular uptake as well as cosubstrate independent enzymatic conversion of EAA, made this substrate highly useful as a hyperpolarized 13C-MR marker. This could be appreciated by the signal-to-noise (SNR) obtained from EAA, which was comparable to the SNR reported in a literature liver cancer study with state-of-the-art hyperpolarized substrate, [1-13C]pyruvate. Also, the contrast-to-noise (CNR) in the EAA based metabolic ratio images was significantly improved compared with the CNR in equivalent images reported using [1-13C]pyruvate.


Acetoacetates , Contrast Media , Liver Neoplasms, Experimental/diagnosis , Acetoacetates/pharmacokinetics , Animals , Biomarkers, Tumor , Carboxylesterase/metabolism , Contrast Media/pharmacokinetics , Hep G2 Cells , Humans , Liver/metabolism , Liver Neoplasms, Experimental/metabolism , Neoplasm Transplantation , Rats, Inbred BUF , Signal-To-Noise Ratio
8.
ChemMedChem ; 7(6): 1084-93, 2012 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22489059

We report the synthesis of novel chelates of Gd and (68)Ga with DPTA, DOTA, HP-DOA3, as well as with AAZTA, a novel chelating agent developed by our research group. These chelating agents were appropriately conjugated, prior to metal complexation, with DB58, an RGD peptidomimetic, conformationally constrained on an azabicycloalkane scaffold and endowed with high affinity for integrin α(ν)ß(3) . Because α(ν)ß(3) is involved in neo-angiogenesis in solid tumors and is also directly expressed in cancer cells (e.g. glioblastomas, melanomas) and ovarian, breast, and prostate cancers, these constructs could prove useful as molecular imaging probes in cancer diagnosis by MRI or PET techniques. Molecular modeling, integrin binding assays, and relaxivity assessments allowed the selection of compounds suitable for multiple expression on dendrimeric or nanoparticulate structures. These results also led us to an exploratory investigation of (68)Ga complexation for the promising (68)Ga-PET technique; the AAZTA complex 15((68)Ga) exhibited uptake in a xenograft model of glioblastoma, suggesting potentially useful developments with new probes with improved affinity.


Coordination Complexes/chemical synthesis , Oligopeptides/chemistry , Radiopharmaceuticals/chemical synthesis , Animals , Cell Line, Tumor , Coordination Complexes/chemistry , Gadolinium/chemistry , Gallium Radioisotopes/chemistry , Glioblastoma/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Mice , Mice, Nude , Models, Molecular , Oligopeptides/metabolism , Positron-Emission Tomography , Protein Binding , Radiopharmaceuticals/chemistry , Transplantation, Heterologous
9.
Contrast Media Mol Imaging ; 5(4): 213-22, 2010.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20812289

Transglutaminases, including factor XIII and tissue transglutaminase, participate in multiple extracellular processes associated with remodeling of the extracellular matrix during wound repair, blood clotting, tumor progression and fibrosis of ischemic injuries. The aim of this work was to evaluate a novel substrate analog for transglutaminase optimized by molecular modeling calculations (DCCP16), which can serve for molecular imaging of transglutaminase activity by magnetic resonance imaging and by near-infrared imaging. Experimental data showed covalent binding of Gd-DCCP16 and DCCP16-IRIS Blue to human clots, to basement membrane components and to casein in purified systems as well as in three-dimensional multicellular spheroids. In vivo, DCCP16 showed enhancement with a prolonged retention in clots and tumors, demonstrating the ability to detect both factor XIII and tissue transglutaminase mediated covalent binding of the contrast material.


Contrast Media/chemistry , Coordination Complexes/chemistry , Factor XIII/chemistry , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Indoles/chemistry , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Peptides/chemistry , Transglutaminases/metabolism , Animals , Factor XIII/metabolism , Humans , Mice , Mice, Inbred Strains , Spheroids, Cellular/metabolism , Transglutaminases/chemistry
10.
Anal Chem ; 81(7): 2779-84, 2009 Apr 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19281170

The present paper describes the detection of a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agent by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization imaging mass spectrometry (MALDI-IMS). The contrast agent was analyzed in both frozen and paraformaldehyde-fixed mouse livers explanted after its in vivo administration, and its identity was confirmed by fragmentation experiments. Moreover, a semiquantitative analysis was performed, evaluating its content in livers from mice sacrificed at different postadministration times. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first description of a MALDI-IMS analysis of MRI contrast agents and the first time that results obtained by MALDI-IMS are validated by both an in vivo (MRI) and an ex vivo (inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectroscopy, ICP-AES) technique. Results shown in the present paper demonstrate the possibility of using MALDI-IMS for drug biodistribution analysis. Obviously, this application is particularly interesting in the case of unlabeled compounds, which cannot be detected by any of the other imaging techniques.


Contrast Media/analysis , Liver/metabolism , Animals , Contrast Media/administration & dosage , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization
11.
J Am Coll Cardiol ; 51(11): 1098-103, 2008 Mar 18.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18342229

OBJECTIVES: This study sought to evaluate in vivo the minimal dose of apolipoprotein (apo) A-I(Milano) phospholipid complex (recombinant apoA-I(Milano) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl phosphatidylcholine complexes [ETC-216]) able to induce atherosclerosis regression in a rabbit model of lipid-rich plaques. BACKGROUND: A single high dose of recombinant apoA-I(Milano) has promoted atherosclerosis regression in animal models. More recently, regression of atherosclerosis was achieved in coronary patients by repeated infusions of ETC-216. METHODS: Thirty-six rabbits underwent perivascular injury at both carotid arteries, followed by a 1.5% cholesterol diet. After 90 days, rabbits were randomly divided into 6 groups and treated 5 times with vehicle or ETC-216 at 5, 10, 20, 40, or 150 mg/kg dose every 4 days. Carotid plaque changes were evaluated in vivo by intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), performed before and at the end of treatments. Magnetic resonance imaging scans were also recorded after administration of the second dose for rabbits infused with vehicle 40 or 150 mg/kg. RESULTS: Atheroma volume in vehicle-treated rabbits increased dramatically between the first and the second IVUS analyses (+26.53%), whereas in ETC-216-treated animals, a reduced progression at the lower doses and a significant regression at the higher doses, up to -6.83%, was detected. Results obtained by MRI analysis correlated significantly with those at IVUS (r = 0.706; p < 0.0001). The MRI evaluations after the second infusion established that a significant regression was achieved with only 2 administrations of the highest dose. CONCLUSIONS: These results confirm the efficacy of ETC-216 for atherosclerosis treatment and provide guidance for dose selection and frequency to obtain a significant reduction of plaque volume.


Anticholesteremic Agents/administration & dosage , Apolipoprotein A-I/administration & dosage , Atherosclerosis/diagnosis , Atherosclerosis/drug therapy , Carotid Artery, Common/drug effects , Carotid Stenosis/drug therapy , Phosphatidylcholines/administration & dosage , Animals , Carotid Stenosis/diagnosis , Cholesterol, HDL/blood , Disease Models, Animal , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Rabbits , Random Allocation , Ultrasonography
12.
Invest Radiol ; 37(4): 222-31, 2002 Apr.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11923645

RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES: All contrast agents should be neurologically safe because although some are not indicated for procedures, such as myelography, just the same they may come in contact with nervous tissue during contrast-enhanced imaging. This is because even when they are intravascularly injected, the presence of undiagnosed blood-brain barrier damage may allow them to penetrate the brain barrier. In the present study, we investigated the neurologic safety of iomeprol by studying in vitro its potential effects on the central nervous system (CNS) synaptic transmission. Other widely used x-ray contrast agents were also assessed for comparative purposes. METHODS: CNS synaptic transmission was evaluated in terms of evoked field potentials recorded from the pyramidal region of rat hippocampal slices. The field potentials were evoked by electrical stimulation of the Schaffer collateral pathway. The effects of the contrast agents were evaluated in terms of number and amplitude of population spikes (PS) and as the maximal slope of the excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSP). The contrast agents were tested at final concentrations of 3, 10, and 30 mg(iodine)/mL in iso-osmolal condition with respect to artificial cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). RESULTS: Iomeprol, like ioversol, principally exerted a mild inhibitory effect on CNS synaptic transmission, an effect that was preceded by a weak, transient excitation. Iopentol exerted a rapid and complete inhibition of synaptic transmission without showing any excitatory effects. Iobitridol, though belonging to the nonionic monomeric class, exerted, surprisingly, an epileptogenic action at the highest concentration, whereas its inhibitory action was slow and mild. Diatrizoate, as expected, exerted an epileptogenic activity even at the lowest concentration, followed by a marked inhibitory action. Ioxaglate, as expected because it is an ionic though dimeric contrast agent, exerted an epileptogenic action at the intermediate concentration, whereas it barely demonstrated an inhibitory effect at all. All the contrast agent effects observed in the study reversed or tended to reverse during washout. CONCLUSIONS: Even taking in account the limitation because of the use of an in vitro approach and high contrast agent concentrations, we can conclude that the positive neuro-tolerability of iomeprol is further confirmed by this model as it proved to be devoid of epileptogenic activity and, among the contrast agents exhibiting inhibitory action, it was the contrast agent with the least amount of activity. In addition, contrary to that generally reported in the literature, nonionic, low osmolal contrast agents are not all identical in their neuro-tolerability when assessed in the rat hippocampal slice model.


Contrast Media/pharmacology , Hippocampus/drug effects , Iopamidol/analogs & derivatives , Iopamidol/pharmacology , Synaptic Transmission/drug effects , Animals , Electrophysiology , Evoked Potentials/drug effects , Male , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
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