Stroma Targeting Nuclear Imaging and Radiopharmaceuticals
Author(s) -
Dinesh Shetty,
Jae Min Jeong,
Hyunsuk Shim
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
international journal of molecular imaging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-1712
pISSN - 2090-1720
DOI - 10.1155/2012/817682
Subject(s) - medicine , stroma , fluorodeoxyglucose , radiation therapy , positron emission tomography , nuclear medicine , pathology , radiology , immunohistochemistry
Malignant transformation of tumor accompanies profound changes in the normal neighboring tissue, called tumor stroma. The tumor stroma provides an environment favoring local tumor growth, invasion, and metastatic spreading. Nuclear imaging (PET/SPECT) measures biochemical and physiologic functions in the human body. In oncology, PET/SPECT is particularly useful for differentiating tumors from postsurgical changes or radiation necrosis, distinguishing benign from malignant lesions, identifying the optimal site for biopsy, staging cancers, and monitoring the response to therapy. Indeed, PET/SPECT is a powerful, proven diagnostic imaging modality that displays information unobtainable through other anatomical imaging, such as CT or MRI. When combined with coregistered CT data, [ 18 F]fluorodeoxyglucose ([ 18 F]FDG)-PET is particularly useful. However, [ 18 F]FDG is not a target-specific PET tracer. This paper will review the tumor microenvironment targeting oncologic imaging such as angiogenesis, invasion, hypoxia, growth, and homing, and also therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals to provide a roadmap for additional applications of tumor imaging and therapy.
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