Longitudinal magnetic resonance imaging-based assessment of vascular changes and radiation response in androgen-sensitive prostate carcinoma xenografts under androgen-exposed and androgen-deprived conditions
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/7887Date
2010-10Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Røe, Kathrine; Seierstad, Therese; Kristian, Alexandr; Mikalsen, Lars Tore G; Mælandsmo, Gunhild; van der Kogel, Albert; Ree, Anne Hansen; Olsen, Dag RuneAbstract
Prostate cancer (PCa) patients receive androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT) to reduce tumor burden. However, complete
eradication of PCa is unusual, and recurrent disease is evident within approximately 2 years in high-risk patients.
Clinical evidence suggests that combining ADT with radiotherapy improves local control and disease-free survival in
these patients compared with radiotherapy alone. We investigated whether vascularization of androgen-sensitive PCa
xenografts changed after ADT and whether such therapy affected radiation response. CWR22 xenografts received
combinations of ADT by castration (CWR22-cas) and 15 Gy of single-dose irradiation. At a shortest tumor diameter
of 8 mm, vascularization was visualized by dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging before radiation
and 1 and 9 days after radiation. Voxel-wise quantitative modeling of contrast enhancement curves extracted the hemodynamic
parameter K trans, reflecting a combination of permeability, density, and blood flow. Tumor volumes and
prostate-specific antigen (PSA) were monitored during the experiment. The results showed that K trans of CWR22-cas
tumors 36 ± 4 days after ADT was 47.1% higher than K trans of CWR22 tumors (P = .01). CWR22-cas tumors showed no
significant changes in K trans after radiation, whereas K trans of CWR22 tumors at day 1 decreased compared with pretreatment
values (P = .04) before a continuous increase from day 1 to day 9 followed (P = .01). Total PSA in blood
correlated positively to tumor volume (r = 0.59, P < .01). In conclusion, androgen-exposed xenografts demonstrated
radiation-induced reductions in vascularization and tumor volumes, whereas androgen-deprived xenografts showed
increased vascularization and growth inhibition, but no significant additive effect of radiation.
Description
Open Access-article, according to info at http://dx.doi.org/10.1593/neo.10484. No OA-info in the pdf-file.
Citation
Neoplasia 12(2010) nr. 10 s. 818-825Metadata
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