NMR in Biomedicine | 2019

Cancer metabolism in a snapshot: MRS(I)

 
 
 

Abstract


The contribution of MRS(I) to the in vivo evaluation of cancer‐metabolism‐derived metrics, mostly since 2016, is reviewed here. Increased carbon consumption by tumour cells, which are highly glycolytic, is now being sampled by 13C magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) following the injection of hyperpolarized [1‐13C] pyruvate (Pyr). Hot‐spots of, mostly, increased lactate dehydrogenase activity or flow between Pyr and lactate (Lac) have been seen with cancer progression in prostate (preclinical and in humans), brain and pancreas (both preclinical) tumours. Therapy response is usually signalled by decreased Lac/Pyr 13C‐labelled ratio with respect to untreated or non‐responding tumour. For therapeutic agents inducing tumour hypoxia, the 13C‐labelled Lac/bicarbonate ratio may be a better metric than the Lac/Pyr ratio. 31P MRSI may sample intracellular pH changes from brain tumours (acidification upon antiangiogenic treatment, basification at fast proliferation and relapse). The steady state tumour metabolome pattern is still in use for cancer evaluation. Metrics used for this range from quantification of single oncometabolites (such as 2‐hydroxyglutarate in mutant IDH1 glial brain tumours) to selected metabolite ratios (such as total choline to N‐acetylaspartate (plain ratio or CNI index)) or the whole 1H MRSI(I) pattern through pattern recognition analysis. These approaches have been applied to address different questions such as tumour subtype definition, following/predicting the response to therapy or defining better resection or radiosurgery limits.

Volume 32
Pages None
DOI 10.1002/nbm.4054
Language English
Journal NMR in Biomedicine

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