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    Mol Cancer Res. 2007 Apr;5(4):341-9.

    Targeted imaging of colonic tumors in smad3-/- mice discriminates cancer and inflammation.

    Deane NG, Manning HC, Foutch AC, Washington MK, Aronow BJ, Bornhop DJ, Coffey RJ.

    Department of Surgery and Division of Surgical Oncology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235, USA.

    Erratum in:

    • Mol Cancer Res. 2007 May;5(5):521. Aronow, Bruce A [corrected to Aronow, Bruce J].

    The peripheral benzodiazepine receptor (PBR) is a trans-mitochondrial membrane protein that modulates steroid biosynthesis. Recently, up-regulation and nuclear localization of PBR has been shown to be associated with colon, prostate, and breast cancer. PBR has been targeted by the exogenous synthetic ligand, PK11195, for various purposes including imaging. To capitalize on these observations, we developed a high-throughput, noninvasive, in vivo imaging approach to detect spontaneously arising colonic tumors in mice using a novel PBR-targeted molecular imaging agent (NIR-conPK11195). NIR-conPK11195 localized and was retained in colonic adenomas and carcinomas in Smad3(-/-) mice but not in non-neoplastic hamartomas or chronically inflamed colonic tissue. Using a fluorescence signal-to-noise ratio of > or =4-fold 13 h after injection of the agent, we detected colonic tumors with a sensitivity of 67% and a specificity of 86% in a cohort of 37 Smad3(-/-) mice and control littermates. Furthermore, using oral administration of dextran sulfate to induce colonic inflammation, we showed that the clearance profile of NIR-conPK11195 distinguished transient uptake in inflammatory tissue from longer term retention in tumors. Taken together, these results indicate that NIR-conPK11195 is a promising optical molecular imaging tool to rapidly screen for colonic tumors in mice and to discriminate inflammation from cancer.

    PMID: 17426249 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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