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Multimodal molecular imaging detects early responses to immune checkpoint blockade.

Cancer Research 2021 April 10
Immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) has become a standard therapy for several cancers; however, the response to ICB is inconsistent and a method for non-invasive assessment has not been established to date. To investigate the capability of multi-modal imaging to evaluate treatment response to ICB therapy, hyperpolarized 13C MRI using [1-13C] pyruvate and [1,4-13C2] fumarate and dynamic contrast enhanced (DCE) MRI were evaluated to detect early changes in tumor glycolysis, necrosis, and intratumor perfusion/permeability, respectively. Mouse tumor models served as platforms for high (MC38 colon adenocarcinoma) and low (B16-F10 melanoma) sensitivity to dual ICB of PD-L1 and CTLA-4. Glycolytic flux significantly decreased following treatment only in the less-sensitive B16-F10 tumors. Imaging [1,4-13C2] fumarate conversion to [1,4-13C2] malate showed a significant increase in necrotic cell death following treatment in the ICB-sensitive MC38 tumors, with essentially no change in B16-F10 tumors. DCE-MRI showed significantly increased perfusion/permeability in MC38-treated tumors, while a similar, but statistically non-significant, trend was observed in B16-F10 tumors. When tumor volume was also taken into consideration, each imaging biomarker was linearly correlated with future survival in both models. These results suggest that hyperpolarized 13C MRI and DCE MRI may serve as useful non-invasive imaging markers to detect early response to ICB therapy.

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