Litcius/Paper detail

T<sub>1</sub> based oxygen-enhanced MRI in tumours; a scoping review of current research

Alastair McCabe, Stewart G. Martin, Jagrit Shah, Paul S. Morgan, Rafał Panek

2023British Journal of Radiology16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Oxygen-enhanced MRI (OE-MRI) or tissue oxygen-level dependent (TOLD) MRI is an imaging technique under investigation for its ability to quantify and map oxygen distributions within tumours. The aim of this study was to identify and characterise the research into OE-MRI for characterising hypoxia in solid tumours. METHODS: relaxation time/rate changes were included. Grey literature was searched from conference abstracts and active clinical trials. RESULTS: 49 unique records met the inclusion criteria consisting of 34 journal articles and 15 conference abstracts. The majority of articles were pre-clinical studies (31 articles) with 15 human only studies. Pre-clinical studies in a range of tumour types demonstrated consistent correlation of OE-MRI with alternative hypoxia measurements. No clear consensus on optimal acquisition technique or analysis methodology was found. No prospective, adequately powered, multicentre clinical studies relating OE-MRI hypoxia markers to patient outcomes were identified. CONCLUSION: There is good pre-clinical evidence of the utility of OE-MRI in tumour hypoxia assessment; however, there are significant gaps in clinical research that need to be addressed to develop OE-MRI into a clinically applicable tumour hypoxia imaging technique. ADVANCES IN KNOWLEDGE: The evidence base of OE-MRI in tumour hypoxia assessment is presented along with a summary of the research gaps to be addressed to transform OE-MRI derived parameters into tumour hypoxia biomarkers.

Topics & Concepts

Current (fluid)MedicineNuclear medicineMedical physicsRadiologyComputer sciencePhysicsThermodynamicsCancer, Hypoxia, and MetabolismMRI in cancer diagnosisAdvanced MRI Techniques and Applications