Translational imaging findings in a pediatric patient …...Translational imaging findings in a...

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Translational imaging findings in a pediatric patient-derived orthotopic xenograft brain tumor model Julia Schueler 1 , Kimmo Lehtimäki 2 , Daniela Lötsch 3 , Dorothee Lenhard 3 , Artem Shatillo 2 , Jussi Rytkönen 2 , Pekka Poutiainen 4 , Timo Bragge 2 , Taneli Heikkinen 2 , Laura Tolppanen 2 , Diana Miszczuk 2 , Johannes Gojol 2 , Walter Berger 2 , Tuulia Huhtala 2 1 Charles River, Freiburg, Germany, 2 Charles River, Kuopio, Finland, 3 Medical University of Vienna, Internal Medicine I, Institute of Cancer Research, 4 Kuopio University Hospital, Kuopio, Finland 1 OVERVIEW Malignant brain tumors are the most common cause of solid cancer death in children. Innovative therapies are vital to improve treatment outcomes, but must be developed to enable trafficking across the blood brain barrier (BBB). For this advent, animal models provide important information prior to clinical studies. Among the different in vivo models orthotopic patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models represent the diversity seen in patient tumors and hence replicate response rates in the clinical trials better as compared to other more simplistic models. Especially in the brain tumor field, imaging has a central role in clinical diagnosis and as a prognostic factor to monitor therapy response. It enables longitudinal patient monitoring in a fully translational manner. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) are widely used for clinical diagnosis and disease follow up. Choosing the most suitable imaging application depends of the target of interest or mechanism of action. MRI offers unprecedented soft tissue contrast, high spatial resolution and non-invasive nature renders MRI in rodents a perfect tool for preclinical work in oncological applications. In case of orthotopic brain tumor models, MRI offers the state-of-the-art anatomical tumor monitoring over disease progression. PET can be applied to study tumor proliferation, metabolism, metastasis as well biodistribution of novel antibodies. Further, a novel approach to study cerebral blood flow was applied using functional ultrasound. 3D reconstruction of the brain can be utilized to study vasculature. The purpose of this work was to characterize orthotopic PDX brain tumor model using MRI, functional ultrasound and PET imaging. By direct comparison of the imaging data derived from the preclinical mouse model with similar data-sets from the donor patient the translational value of the model as well as the read-out system will be achieved. As a conclusion, translational in vivo imaging techniques were applied to study orthotopic tumor model. These readouts provide a powerful and translational research tool together with oncological disease animal models allowing comprehensive evaluation of disease progression and treatment interventions for in vivo studies. 2 MRI, fUS AND PET IMAGING Total of 8 NSG mice were used to model an orthotopic paediatric PDX glioma. During the course of the experiment weight of the animals was monitored daily. The experiment was conducted in AAALAC accredited facilities. MRI. Anatomical imaging was performed at day 7 post-implantation using 11.7 T small animal scanner (Bruker BioSpin, Germany). Experimental protocol consisted breathing gated localizer images, multi-slice multi-echo sequence for absolute T2 mapping and fid-FISP sequence for high resolution anatomical images, spin-echo diffusion maps. (FIGURE 1.) FUNCTIONAL ULTRASOUND. Tomographic ultrasound imaging was performed using a prototype functional ultrasound system (Iconeus, France), consisting of ultra-fast ultrasound imaging system, miniature probe allowing precise positioning in 3 orthogonal planes. Plane-wave ultrasound imaging of the brain at high frame rate was performed in 3D mode, which enables reconstruction of high-resolution map of perfusion in arterioles. Isoflurane–anesthetized mice were shaved, fixed into the pre-heated fUS holder and then imaged with ~100 um in-plane resolution from -5 mm to +2 mm from bregma. (FIGURE 2A.) PET. For the metabolic activity imaging at day 7, mice were cannulated, aligned to PET/CT scanner (BioPET/CT, Sedecal), dosed with 18 F-FDG and scanned 30 – 55 min post dosing. 3D OSEM reconstruction was applied prior quantitative analysis (PMOD v3.7). (FIGURE 2B– 2E.) 4 CONCLUSIONS In this study individual pathological findings in PDX glioma model were studied using translational imaging modalities. MRI clearly showed the pathological changes in brain as well variation within model, which resembles well the clinical situation. Perfusion maps obtained with fUS demonstrated vascular abnormalities along the enlarged ventricles but no dramatic changes in local perfusion. Metabolic changes reflecting brain functionality, damaged and proliferating/inflammatory areas were visualized. Further, neurological scoring was applied to monitor general health status of studied animals. As a summary, the used PDX model showed similar pathological findings as reported in clinical patients. 4240 3 NEUROLOGICAL INDEX NEUROLOGICAL CHRACTERIZATION. Each mouse was observed over 1-2 minutes to score neurological index. The following 30 behaviors were evaluated: Head Tremor, Head Twitch, Head Bobbing, Head Searching, Body Tremor, Body Twitch, Tail Tremor, Tail Twitch, Straub Tail, Piloerection, Shallow Respiration, Flattened Body Posture, Swollen Face, Ptosis, Irritability, Seizure, Urine Staining, Lacrimation, Salivation, Limb Splay, Catalepsy, Abnormal Gait, Tip Toe Walking, Slow Careful Movements, Excessive Grooming, Circling, Sniffing, and Chewing. In addition to the above occurrences the chronic observational phase includes excessive locomotor activity, loss of startle response, loss of righting reflex, dehydration and tail pinch. The assessment was performed as follows: A score of 0 was assigned for normal features (such as locomotor activity) or for the absence of abnormal features (such as absence of piloerection); a score of 1 was given when mild abnormalities were observed; and a score of 2-3 was given when severe abnormalities were observed. All of these features were scored from simple observation of the mice in their cage, except for the startle, tail pinch and righting reflexes which are direct manipulations. To test the startle reflex, a small hand clicker was used to generate a loud popping noise and the following behaviors were identified during this process: jumping, freezing, and rapid eye blinks. For the righting reflex, each mouse was then removed from its home cage and placed on its back allowing the mouse to correct itself. Tail pinch was tested by gently squeezing the end of the tail with forceps. (FIGURE 3.) FIGURE 2. A) Morphology of vasculature and changes related to cerebral blood flow as a result of pathological change or alteration related to pharmacological effect can be visualized longitudinally. B, C) Metabolic activity in brain was decreased in damaged regions and increased due to proliferation or inflammation compared to naïve mouse (D). E) Whole-body imaging supports to study possible peripheral metastases. -1.8 mm from Bregma 0.5 mm from Bregma A B C D E FIGURE 3. Neurological scoring can be applied to monitor general welfare of the animals. FIGURE 1. Pathological findings in pediatric PDX glioma model. Anatomical images (left panel) as coronal slices are shown in caudal to rostral direction from 2 individuals (A-B) with corresponding T2 heat maps (right panel). Increased amount of CSF especially in 4 th ventricle was observed (red arrow). Further, acute obstructive hydrocephalus/aqueduct stenosis caused by extrinsic compression was observed in all shown animals. For clinical diagnosis, features and causes related to acute obstructive hydrocephalus include e.g. enlargement of the temporal horns, transependymal edema, or periventricular oozing of lateral ventricles and outward bowing of the lateral walls of third ventricle. In clinical cases pathological background for this can be divided to congenital as gliosis or aqueductal webs, extrinsic reasons as compression due to brain tumors of different origin or intrinsic reasons related to meningitis or subarachnoid hemorrhage. As a summary, similar pathological findings were seen using MRI in this pediatric PDX glioma model as described in clinical patients. T2 heat maps can be used to visualize condition of brain and numerical readout (T2 relaxation time) can be derived from regions of interest. C) As a comparison for this study with PDX glioma model, case example images of solid glioma model in rat (BT4c-tk cells) over time. Rats were scanned on days 13, 21 and 42 post intracranial cell infusion. These images demonstrate precise approach for volumetric analysis using MRI in orthotopic glioma models. A-T2 B-T2 A B C

Transcript of Translational imaging findings in a pediatric patient …...Translational imaging findings in a...

Page 1: Translational imaging findings in a pediatric patient …...Translational imaging findings in a pediatric patient-derived orthotopic xenograft brain tumor model Julia Schueler 1 ,

Translational imaging findings in a pediatric patient-derived orthotopic xenograft brain tumor modelJulia Schueler1, Kimmo Lehtimäki2, Daniela Lötsch3, Dorothee Lenhard3, Artem Shatillo2, Jussi Rytkönen2, Pekka Poutiainen4, Timo Bragge2, Taneli Heikkinen2, Laura Tolppanen2, Diana Miszczuk2, Johannes Gojol2, Walter Berger2, Tuulia Huhtala2

1Charles River, Freiburg, Germany, 2Charles River, Kuopio, Finland, 3Medical University of Vienna, Internal Medicine I, Institute of Cancer Research, 4Kuopio University Hospital, Kuopio, Finland

1 OVERVIEWMalignant brain tumors are the most common cause of solid cancer death in children. Innovativetherapies are vital to improve treatment outcomes, but must be developed to enable trafficking across theblood brain barrier (BBB). For this advent, animal models provide important information prior to clinicalstudies. Among the different in vivo models orthotopic patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models representthe diversity seen in patient tumors and hence replicate response rates in the clinical trials better ascompared to other more simplistic models.

Especially in the brain tumor field, imaging has a central role in clinical diagnosis and as a prognosticfactor to monitor therapy response. It enables longitudinal patient monitoring in a fully translationalmanner. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) are widely used forclinical diagnosis and disease follow up. Choosing the most suitable imaging application depends of thetarget of interest or mechanism of action. MRI offers unprecedented soft tissue contrast, high spatialresolution and non-invasive nature renders MRI in rodents a perfect tool for preclinical work inoncological applications. In case of orthotopic brain tumor models, MRI offers the state-of-the-artanatomical tumor monitoring over disease progression. PET can be applied to study tumor proliferation,metabolism, metastasis as well biodistribution of novel antibodies. Further, a novel approach to studycerebral blood flow was applied using functional ultrasound. 3D reconstruction of the brain can be utilizedto study vasculature.

The purpose of this work was to characterize orthotopic PDX brain tumor model using MRI, functionalultrasound and PET imaging. By direct comparison of the imaging data derived from the preclinicalmouse model with similar data-sets from the donor patient the translational value of the model as well asthe read-out system will be achieved.

As a conclusion, translational in vivo imaging techniques were applied to study orthotopic tumor model.These readouts provide a powerful and translational research tool together with oncological diseaseanimal models allowing comprehensive evaluation of disease progression and treatment interventions forin vivo studies.

2 MRI , fUS AND PET IMAGINGTotal of 8 NSG mice were used to model an orthotopic paediatric PDX glioma. During the course of theexperiment weight of the animals was monitored daily. The experiment was conducted in AAALACaccredited facilities.MRI. Anatomical imaging was performed at day 7 post-implantation using 11.7 T small animal scanner(Bruker BioSpin, Germany). Experimental protocol consisted breathing gated localizer images, multi-slicemulti-echo sequence for absolute T2 mapping and fid-FISP sequence for high resolution anatomicalimages, spin-echo diffusion maps. (FIGURE 1.)FUNCTIONAL ULTRASOUND. Tomographic ultrasound imaging was performed using a prototypefunctional ultrasound system (Iconeus, France), consisting of ultra-fast ultrasound imaging system,miniature probe allowing precise positioning in 3 orthogonal planes. Plane-wave ultrasound imaging ofthe brain at high frame rate was performed in 3D mode, which enables reconstruction of high-resolutionmap of perfusion in arterioles. Isoflurane–anesthetized mice were shaved, fixed into the pre-heated fUSholder and then imaged with ~100 um in-plane resolution from -5 mm to +2 mm from bregma. (FIGURE2A.)PET. For the metabolic activity imaging at day 7, mice were cannulated, aligned to PET/CT scanner(BioPET/CT, Sedecal), dosed with 18F-FDG and scanned 30 – 55 min post dosing. 3D OSEMreconstruction was applied prior quantitative analysis (PMOD v3.7). (FIGURE 2B– 2E.)

4 CONCLUSIONSIn this study individual pathological findings in PDX glioma model were studied usingtranslational imaging modalities. MRI clearly showed the pathological changes in brain as wellvariation within model, which resembles well the clinical situation. Perfusion maps obtained withfUS demonstrated vascular abnormalities along the enlarged ventricles but no dramaticchanges in local perfusion. Metabolic changes reflecting brain functionality, damaged andproliferating/inflammatory areas were visualized. Further, neurological scoring was applied tomonitor general health status of studied animals. As a summary, the used PDX model showedsimilar pathological findings as reported in clinical patients.

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3 NEUROLOGICAL INDEXNEUROLOGICAL CHRACTERIZATION. Each mousewas observed over 1-2 minutes to score neurologicalindex. The following 30 behaviors were evaluated:Head Tremor, Head Twitch, Head Bobbing, HeadSearching, Body Tremor, Body Twitch, Tail Tremor, TailTwitch, Straub Tail, Piloerection, Shallow Respiration,Flattened Body Posture, Swollen Face, Ptosis,Irritability, Seizure, Urine Staining, Lacrimation,Salivation, Limb Splay, Catalepsy, Abnormal Gait, TipToe Walking, Slow Careful Movements, ExcessiveGrooming, Circling, Sniffing, and Chewing. In additionto the above occurrences the chronic observationalphase includes excessive locomotor activity, loss ofstartle response, loss of righting reflex, dehydration andtail pinch. The assessment was performed as follows: Ascore of 0 was assigned for normal features (such aslocomotor activity) or for the absence of abnormalfeatures (such as absence of piloerection); a score of 1was given when mild abnormalities were observed; anda score of 2-3 was given when severe abnormalitieswere observed. All of these features were scored fromsimple observation of the mice in their cage, except forthe startle, tail pinch and righting reflexes which aredirect manipulations. To test the startle reflex, a smallhand clicker was used to generate a loud poppingnoise and the following behaviors were identified duringthis process: jumping, freezing, and rapid eye blinks.For the righting reflex, each mouse was then removedfrom its home cage and placed on its back allowing themouse to correct itself. Tail pinch was tested by gentlysqueezing the end of the tail with forceps. (FIGURE 3.)

FIGURE 2. A) Morphology of vasculature and changesrelated to cerebral blood flow as a result of pathologicalchange or alteration related to pharmacological effect canbe visualized longitudinally. B, C) Metabolic activity inbrain was decreased in damaged regions and increaseddue to proliferation or inflammation compared to naïvemouse (D). E) Whole-body imaging supports to studypossible peripheral metastases.

-1.8 mm from Bregma

0.5 mm from Bregma

A B C

D

E

FIGURE 3. Neurological scoring can beapplied to monitor general welfare of theanimals.

FIGURE 1. Pathological findings in pediatric PDX glioma model. Anatomical images (left panel) as coronal slices are shownin caudal to rostral direction from 2 individuals (A-B) with corresponding T2 heat maps (right panel). Increased amount ofCSF especially in 4th ventricle was observed (red arrow). Further, acute obstructive hydrocephalus/aqueduct stenosis causedby extrinsic compression was observed in all shown animals. For clinical diagnosis, features and causes related to acuteobstructive hydrocephalus include e.g. enlargement of the temporal horns, transependymal edema, or periventricular oozingof lateral ventricles and outward bowing of the lateral walls of third ventricle. In clinical cases pathological background for thiscan be divided to congenital as gliosis or aqueductal webs, extrinsic reasons as compression due to brain tumors of differentorigin or intrinsic reasons related to meningitis or subarachnoid hemorrhage. As a summary, similar pathological findingswere seen using MRI in this pediatric PDX glioma model as described in clinical patients. T2 heat maps can be used tovisualize condition of brain and numerical readout (T2 relaxation time) can be derived from regions of interest.C) As a comparison for this study with PDX glioma model, case example images of solid glioma model in rat (BT4c-tk cells)over time. Rats were scanned on days 13, 21 and 42 post intracranial cell infusion. These images demonstrate preciseapproach for volumetric analysis using MRI in orthotopic glioma models.

A-T2

B-T2

A

B

C