Spatial frequency domain imaging for monitoring immune-mediated chemotherapy treatment response and resistance in a murine breast cancer model
Date Issued
2022-04-07Publisher Version
10.1038/s41598-022-09671-2Author(s)
Tank, Anup
Vergato, Cameron
Waxman, David J.
Roblyer, Darren
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https://hdl.handle.net/2144/46574Version
Published version
Citation (published version)
A. Tank, C. Vergato, D.J. Waxman, D. Roblyer. 2022. "Spatial frequency domain imaging for monitoring immune-mediated chemotherapy treatment response and resistance in a murine breast cancer model." Scientific Reports, Volume 12, Issue 1, pp.5864-. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-09671-2Abstract
Spatial Frequency Domain Imaging (SFDI) can provide longitudinal, label-free, and widefield hemodynamic and scattering measurements of murine tumors in vivo. Our previous work has shown that the reduced scattering coefficient (μ's) at 800 nm, as well as the wavelength dependence of scattering, both have prognostic value in tracking apoptosis and proliferation during treatment with anti-cancer therapies. However, there is limited work in validating these optical biomarkers in clinically relevant tumor models that manifest specific treatment resistance mechanisms that mimic the clinical setting. It was recently demonstrated that metronomic dosing of cyclophosphamide induces a strong anti-tumor immune response and tumor volume reduction in the E0771 murine breast cancer model. This immune activation mechanism can be blocked with an IFNAR-1 antibody, leading to treatment resistance. Here we present a longitudinal study utilizing SFDI to monitor this paired responsive-resistant model for up to 30 days of drug treatment. Mice receiving the immune modulatory metronomic cyclophosphamide schedule had a significant increase in tumor optical scattering compared to mice receiving cyclophosphamide in combination with the IFNAR-1 antibody (9% increase vs 10% decrease on day 5 of treatment, p < 0.001). The magnitude of these differences increased throughout the duration of treatment. Additionally, scattering changes on day 4 of treatment could discriminate responsive versus resistant tumors with an accuracy of 78%, while tumor volume had an accuracy of only 52%. These results validate optical scattering as a promising prognostic biomarker that can discriminate between treatment responsive and resistant tumor models.
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