The clinical utility of imaging methods used to measure hypoxia in cervical cancer

Author:

Waller Joseph1,Onderdonk Benjamin2,Flood Ann3,Swartz Harold3,Shah Jaffer1,Shah Asghar4,Aydogan Bulent2,Halpern Howard2,Hasan Yasmin2

Affiliation:

1. Drexel College of Medicine, 2900 W Queen Ln, PA 19129, United States

2. Department of Radiation and Cellular Oncology, The University of Chicago, 5758 S Maryland Ave, IL 60637, United States

3. Department of Radiology, Dartmouth Geisel School of Medicine, 1 Rope Ferry Rd, NH 03755, United States

4. Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, United States

Abstract

While it is well-established that hypoxia is a major factor that affects clinical outcomes in cervical cancer, widespread usage of clinically available methods to detect and evaluate hypoxia during the course of treatment have not been established. This review compares these methods, summarizes their strengths and weaknesses, and assesses the pathways for their useful employment to alter clinical practice. We conducted a search on PubMed for literature pertaining to imaging hypoxic cervical cancer, and implemented keywords related to oxygen measurement tools to improve the relevance of the search results. Oxygenation level-dependent applications of MRI have demonstrated hypoxia-induced radioresistance, and changes in cervix tumor oxygenation from hyperoxic therapy. The hypoxic areas within tumors can be indirectly identified in dynamic contrast-enhanced images, where they generally display low signal enhancement, and diffusion-weighted images, which demonstrates areas of restricted diffusion (which correlates with hypoxia). Positron emmision tomography, used independently and with other imaging modalities, has demonstrated utility in imaging hypoxia through tracers specific for low oxygen levels, like Cu-ATSM tracers and nitroimidazoles. Detecting hypoxia in the tumors of patients diagnosed with cervical cancer via medical imaging and non-imaging tools like electron paramagnetic resonance oximetry can be utilized clinically, such as for guiding radiation and post-treatment surveillance, for a more personalized approach to treatment. The merits of these methods warrant further investigation via comparative effectiveness research and large clinical trials into their clinical applications.

Publisher

British Institute of Radiology

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine

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