Imaging of brain oxygenation with magnetic resonance imaging: A validation with positron emission tomography in the healthy and tumoural brain

Author:

Valable Samuel1,Corroyer-Dulmont Aurélien1,Chakhoyan Ararat1,Durand Lucile1,Toutain Jérôme1,Divoux Didier1,Barré Louisa2,MacKenzie Eric T1,Petit Edwige1,Bernaudin Myriam1,Touzani Omar1,Barbier Emmanuel L34

Affiliation:

1. Normandie Université, UNICAEN, CEA, CNRS, ISTCT/CERVOxy Group, Caen, France

2. Normandie Université, UNICAEN, CEA, CNRS, ISTCT/LDM-TEP Group, Caen, France

3. Inserm, U1216, Grenoble, France

4. Université Grenoble Alpes, Grenoble Institut des Neurosciences, Grenoble, France

Abstract

The partial pressure in oxygen remains challenging to map in the brain. Two main strategies exist to obtain surrogate measures of tissue oxygenation: the tissue saturation studied by magnetic resonance imaging (StO2-MRI) and the identification of hypoxia by a positron emission tomography (PET) biomarker with 3-[18F]fluoro-1-(2-nitro-1-imidazolyl)-2-propanol ([18F]-FMISO) as the leading radiopharmaceutical. Nonetheless, a formal validation of StO2-MRI against FMISO-PET has not been performed. The objective of our studies was to compare the two approaches in (a) the normal rat brain when the rats were submitted to hypoxemia; (b) animals implanted with four tumour types differentiated by their oxygenation. Rats were submitted to normoxic and hypoxemic conditions. For the brain tumour experiments, U87-MG, U251-MG, 9L and C6 glioma cells were orthotopically inoculated in rats. For both experiments, StO2-MRI and [18F]-FMISO PET were performed sequentially. Under hypoxemia conditions, StO2-MRI revealed a decrease in oxygen saturation in the brain. Nonetheless, [18F]-FMISO PET, pimonidazole immunohistochemistry and molecular biology were insensitive to hypoxia. Within the context of tumours, StO2-MRI was able to detect hypoxia in the hypoxic models, mimicking [18F]-FMISO PET with high sensitivity/specificity. Altogether, our data clearly support that, in brain pathologies, StO2-MRI could be a robust and specific imaging biomarker to assess hypoxia.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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