VCAM-1–targeted MRI Enables Detection of Brain Micrometastases from Different Primary Tumors
2019
Purpose: A major issue for the effective treatment of brain metastasis is the late stage of diagnosis with existing clinical tools. The aim of this study was to evaluate the potential of vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1)-targeted MRI for early detection of brain micrometastases in mouse models across multiple primary tumor types. Experimental Design: Xenograft models of brain micrometastasis for human breast carcinoma (MDA231Br-GFP), lung adenocarcinoma (SEBTA-001), and melanoma (H1_DL2) were established via intracardiac injection in mice. Animals ( n = 5–6/group) were injected intravenously with VCAM-1–targeted microparticles of iron oxide (VCAM-MPIO) and, subsequently, underwent T 2 *-weighted MRI. Control groups of naive mice injected with VCAM-MPIO and tumor-bearing mice injected with nontargeting IgG-MPIO were included. Results: All models showed disseminated micrometastases in the brain, together with endothelial VCAM-1 upregulation across the time course. T 2 *-weighted MRI of all tumor-bearing mice injected with VCAM-MPIO showed significantly more signal hypointensities ( P Conclusions: VCAM-1–targeted MRI enables the detection of brain micrometastases from the three primary tumor types known to cause the majority of clinical cases. These findings represent an important step forward in the development of a broadly applicable and clinically relevant imaging technique for early diagnosis of brain metastasis, with significant implications for improved patient survival.
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