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- Title
Bioluminescence as Gold Standard for Validation of Optical Imaging Modalities in Peritoneal Carcinomatosis Animal Models.
- Authors
Harlaar, N. J.; Hesselink, J. W.; de Jong, J. S.; van Dam, G. M.
- Abstract
Background: The outcome of cytoreductive surgery in patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis is influenced by incomplete resection as a result of inadequate detection of a tumor, i.e. residual disease. The future perspective of complete resection, made possible by application of intraoperative near-infrared fluorescence imaging (NIRF), led to the development and validation of a bioluminescent colorectal peritoneal carcinomatosis xenograft rat model to act as the gold standard for the evaluation of new optical imaging modalities. Methods: Twenty nude rats were inoculated intraperitoneally with 2 × 106 luciferase-labeled human colorectal tumor cells (HT-29-luc-D6). The peritoneal carcinomatosis index (PCI) was estimated using visual observation (PCI-VO) and VO combined with bioluminescence imaging (PCI-BLI). Subsequently, the BL images were presented, and residual tumor tissue was localized by PCI-BLI scoring and compared with the PCI-VO. Results: BLI revealed additional tumor tissue, confirmed by HE staining, compared to VO alone in 7 out of 8 rats (p < 0.02). Conclusion: The developed model turned out to be suitable. The use of BLI for tumor detection was more sensitive compared to VO alone. In this model, BLI significantly detected residual disease, and therefore, BLI can be denominated as the gold standard for the evaluation of optical imaging modalities like NIRF. Copyright © 2010 S. Karger AG, Basel
- Subjects
BIOLUMINESCENCE; MODALITY (Theory of knowledge); MENINGEAL cancer; ANIMAL models in research; PREDICTION models; FLUORESCENCE spectroscopy; ABDOMINAL tumors; DIAGNOSIS
- Publication
European Surgical Research, 2010, Vol 45, Issue 3/4, p308
- ISSN
0014-312X
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.1159/000318600