Breast care | |
Breast Cancer Treatment in the Era of Molecular Imaging | |
Martin Funovics1  Gundula Edelhauser1  | |
[1] Workgroup for Experimental Radiology and Preclinical Imaging, Cardiovascular and Interventional Radiology, Department of Radiology, Medical University of Vienna, Austria | |
关键词: Breast cancer; Molecular imaging; PET; MRI; Optical imaging; Receptor; | |
DOI : 10.1159/000181160 | |
学科分类:泌尿医学 | |
来源: S Karger AG | |
【 摘 要 】
Molecular imaging employs molecularly targeted probes to visualize and often quantify distinct disease-specific markers and pathways. Modalities like intravital confocal or multiphoton microscopy, near-infrared fluorescence combined with endoscopy, surface reflectance imaging, or fluorescence-mediated tomography, and radionuclide imaging with positron emission tomography (PET) and single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) are increasingly used for small animal high-throughput screening, drug development and testing, and monitoring gene therapy experiments. In the clinical treatment of breast cancer, PET and SPECT as well as magnetic resonance-based molecular imaging are already established for the staging of distant disease and intrathoracic nodal status, for patient selection regarding receptor-directed treatments, and to gain early information about treatment efficacy. In the near future, reporter gene imaging during gene therapy and further spatial and qualitative characterization of the disease can become clinically possible with radionuclide and optical methods. Ultimately, it may be expected that every level of breast cancer treatment will be affected by molecular imaging, including screening.
【 授权许可】
Unknown
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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RO201911300403350ZK.pdf | 423KB | download |