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Photodynamic Therapy of Established Prostatic Adenocarcinoma with TOOKAD: A Biphasic Apparent Diffusion Coefficient Change as Potential Early MRI Response Marker
Author(s) -
Vicki Plaks,
Natalia V. Koudinova,
Uri Nevo,
Jehonathan H. Pinthus,
Hannah Kanety,
Zelig Eshhar,
Jacob Ramon,
Avigdor Scherz,
Michal Neeman,
Yoram Salomon
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
neoplasia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.52
H-Index - 129
eISSN - 1522-8002
pISSN - 1476-5586
DOI - 10.1593/neo.3352
Subject(s) - photodynamic therapy , effective diffusion coefficient , prostate cancer , medicine , magnetic resonance imaging , prostate , immunohistochemistry , adenocarcinoma , photosensitizer , pathology , prostate specific antigen , cancer , cancer research , urology , nuclear medicine , chemistry , radiology , organic chemistry
The goal of this study was to examine the use of diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI) for the assessment of early progression of photodamage induced by Pd-bacteriopheophorbide (TOOKAD)-based photodynamic therapy (PDT). TOOKAD is a novel second-generation photosensitizer for PDT of solid tumors developed in our laboratory and presently under clinical trials for prostate cancer (PC) therapy. Using the subcutaneous human prostate adenocarcinoma WISH-PC14 xenografts in nude mice as a model, a unique biphasic change in the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) was observed within the first 24 hours post-PDT, with initial decrease followed by an increase in ADC. Using DW-MRI, this phenomenon enables the detection of successful tumor response to PDT within 7 hours posttreatment. This process was validated by direct, histological, and immunohistochemical examinations and also by evaluation of serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels that decreased significantly already 7 hours posttreatment. In vitro studies of multicellular cell spheroids confirmed a PDT-induced decrease in ADC, suggesting that lipid peroxidation (LPO) significantly contributes to ADC decline observed after PDT. These results demonstrate that TOOKAD-based PDT successfully eradicates prostate adenocarcinoma xenografts and suggests DW-MRI to be useful for the detection of early tumor response and treatment outcome in the clinical setting.

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