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Glutamine-based PET imaging facilitates enhanced metabolic evaluation of gliomas in vivo

Authors :
Wolfgang A. Weber
Ingo K. Mellinghoff
Justin R. Cross
Patrick Zanzonico
Carl Campos
Jason S. Lewis
Antonio Omuro
Serge K. Lyashchenko
Craig B. Thompson
Cameron Brennan
Eric C. Holland
Daniel Rohle
Sean Carlin
Mark Dunphy
Kenneth L. Pitter
Gaspare La Rocca
Sriram Venneti
Karl Ploessl
Hank F. Kung
Hanwen Zhang
Source :
Science Translational Medicine. 7
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2015.

Abstract

Glucose and glutamine are the two principal nutrients that cancer cells use to proliferate and survive. Many cancers show altered glucose metabolism, which constitutes the basis for in vivo positron emission tomography (PET) imaging with (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose ((18)F-FDG). However, (18)F-FDG is ineffective in evaluating gliomas because of high background uptake in the brain. Glutamine metabolism is also altered in many cancers, and we demonstrate that PET imaging in vivo with the glutamine analog 4-(18)F-(2S,4R)-fluoroglutamine ((18)F-FGln) shows high uptake in gliomas but low background brain uptake, facilitating clear tumor delineation. Chemo/radiation therapy reduced (18)F-FGln tumor avidity, corresponding with decreased tumor burden. (18)F-FGln uptake was not observed in animals with a permeable blood-brain barrier or neuroinflammation. We translated these findings to human subjects, where (18)F-FGln showed high tumor/background ratios with minimal uptake in the surrounding brain in human glioma patients with progressive disease. These data suggest that (18)F-FGln is avidly taken up by gliomas, can be used to assess metabolic nutrient uptake in gliomas in vivo, and may serve as a valuable tool in the clinical management of gliomas.

Details

ISSN :
19466242 and 19466234
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science Translational Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f0f4348881bb5bd8e7aa7c2d57719c49
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.aaa1009