Animal Model
Both flanks of NMRI nu/nu mice (age, 8–10 weeks; weight, 22–28 g; Harlan, Zeist, the Netherlands) were implanted subcutaneously with small tissue pieces of the human HNSCC HNX-OE, as described previously [24]. Mice were kept in sterile surroundings with standardized light/dark cycle and access to food and water ad libitum. Tumor size was determined by caliper measurements at least twice a week using the formula \(T_{{{\text{vol}}}} = \frac{{l \cdot w \cdot h}} {2}\) (l, length; w, width; h, height of the tumor) [25, 26]. Treatment started at tumor volumes between 50 and 150 mm3. After the experiment, mice were sacrificed and tumor tissue was rapidly excised. Tumors were excised at days 38 and 36 after start of treatment for the FDG and FLT group, respectively. Mice from the control group were killed at day 16. All animal experiments were carried out in accordance with the Dutch Law on Animal Experimentation and the institutional committee on animal experimentation.
Radiotherapy
Local external beam radiation was applied using a clinical X-ray therapy unit (PANTAK Therapax SXT, 150 kV photon, filter 8 [0.2 Al + 1.0 Cu]) at a dose rate of 206.6 Gy/min. For homogeneous dose distributions, anteroposterior and posteroanterior external beam radiotherapy fields were used. Radiation was performed under intraperitoneally anesthesia using a mixture of Ketamine/xylazine (2/1; 1 ml/kg; i.p.).
Experimental Design
Radiosensitivity
As radiosensitivity of the tumor line HNX-OE was unknown, a maximum tolerated dose (MTD) finding study was carried out first. MTD is defined as a weight loss of maximally 10% in the group of mice, with a maximum of 15% per individual mouse. The weight of the mice was measured three times a week. Tumor-bearing nude mice were randomized into five groups of six mice each. Xenografts were exposed locally to a single radiation dose of 10, 14, 18 or 22 Gy, while the fifth group was not irradiated (control group). Tumors were measured three times a week, and growth curves were established, relating mean volume over time to the volume on the first day of irradiation. Antitumor activity was expressed as tumor-to-control tumor volume ratio (T/C) in percentage to control. Increase in life span (ILS) was also calculated. ILS was defined as the median life span of the treated group divided by the median life span of the control group, using the day of transplantation as day 0. The day of death was defined as the day at which mice were taken off the experiment.
Differences in significance between the antitumor effects of a particular treatment were determined by means of Kaplan–Meier analysis.
Production of PET Tracers
FLT was produced according to the method described by Machulla et al. [27] with modifications. This procedure resulted in a good manufacturing practice (GMP) compliant, pyrogen-free, sterile production of FLT with a radiochemical purity >97% and an average (±SD) yield of 1.5 ± 0.5 GBq and a mean specific activity of 100.2 GBq/μmol. FDG was produced under GMP conditions for human use by BV Cyclotron VU (Amsterdam, the Netherlands) with a radiochemical purity of >97%.
PET Protocol
PET studies were performed with a double-LSO-layer High Resolution Research Tomograph (HRRT, CTI, Knoxville, TN), a dedicated animal and human brain scanner with no interplane septa (3D) and with depth-of-interaction information. This scanner combines high uniform spatial resolution with high absolute sensitivity [28]. For attenuation correction, a transmission scan using a single-photon 137-Cs transmission point source was acquired.
PET scans were acquired under inhalation anesthesia (mixture of 5% isoflurane: 95% oxygen). Acquisitions started 30 min after tracer injection. Data were acquired in list mode during 60 min and rebinned retrospectively into a series of four sinograms of 15 min duration. All data were normalized, corrected for attenuation, and reconstructed (using OSEM3D) into a series of image volumes with a cubical voxel size of 1.2 mm. Reconstructed resolution was almost isotropic with 2.2 mm full width at half maximum in the center of the field of view and 2.5 mm at 10 cm off-axis [28].
Response Monitoring
Three groups, each of six tumor-bearing mice, were followed over time. One group served as control and the other two groups (FDG and FLT groups) were exposed to 22 Gy in six fractions over a 2-week treatment schedule. PET scans were performed in these latter two groups before and during radiotherapeutic treatment, according to the schedule depicted in Table 1. Tracer dose was 5.0 ± 0.8 and 3.7 ± 0.9 MBq for FDG and FLT, respectively.
Table 1 Schematic outline of response monitoring experiment
PET Analysis
Three-dimensional (3-D) regions of interest (ROIs) were placed semiautomatically using dedicated software [29]. The tumor hot spot was interactively set in the plane where the tumor was best visible (frames 30–60 min), and ROIs were then set automatically using a 3-D region-growing algorithm around the tumor area and in a corresponding normal tissue next to the tumor area in all planes where the tumor was found. Tumor ROIs were copied to normal tissue to obtain normal tissue ROIs of comparable size and shape. Activity was calculated in pixels with an intensity of 70% compared to the most intense pixel. Reference ROIs were used for T/NT ratio calculation.
$$T \mathord{\left/ {\vphantom {T {{\text{NT}}}}} \right. \kern-\nulldelimiterspace} {{\text{NT}}} = \frac{{{\text{Radioactivity}}\,{\text{Concentration}}\,{\text{in}}\,{\text{Tumor}}\,{\left( {{{\text{MBq}}} \mathord{\left/ {\vphantom {{{\text{MBq}}} {{\text{cc}}}}} \right. \kern-\nulldelimiterspace} {{\text{cc}}}} \right)}}} {{{\text{Radioactivity}}\,{\text{Concentration}}\,{\text{in}}\,{\text{Normal}}\,{\text{Tissue}}\,{\left( {{{\text{MBq}}} \mathord{\left/ {\vphantom {{{\text{MBq}}} {{\text{cc}}}}} \right. \kern-\nulldelimiterspace} {{\text{cc}}}} \right)}}}$$
Immunohistochemistry
Immunohistochemistry was performed on 4-μm thick formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded or 5 μm of cryostat xenograft tissue sections as described earlier [30, 31]. Tumors were all excised at days 38 and 36 after start of treatment for the FDG and FLT group, respectively. Mice from the control group were all killed at day 16. Representative sections of tumors were quantitatively analyzed for the percentage of tumor cells, p53 nuclear staining and Ki67 expression, as described previously [30]. An experienced pathologist (G. M.), blinded to all other data, assessed the immunohistochemically stained slides on a multiheaded microscope in the presence of one junior (J. T. F.) and one senior (C. F. M. M.) researcher with experience in immunohistochemistry. The intensity of tumor cell cytoplasmic staining for vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and hexokinase (HK) isoforms I, II, and III was graded as negative (−), weak (+), positive (2+), and strongly positive (3+), ignoring nuclear staining, which was frequently noted for all HKs. The numbers of cells with Glut-1 membrane and/or cytoplasmic staining, the amount of microvessels and CD68-positive macrophages, were semiquantitatively scored as none (−), occasionally (+), moderately frequent (2+), or frequent (3+).
Statistical Analysis
In the radiosensitivity study, treatment effects in each group were examined using Kaplan–Meier analysis (SPSS for Windows 11.0.1, SPSS, Chicago, IL) followed by a log-rank test.
In the response monitoring study, differences between control and FDG and FLT groups were examined by repeated measures analysis of variance followed by a least significant difference test. Univariate logistic regression was performed to assess the relation between tumor volume after radiotherapy and final PET values (T/NT). For testing associations between FDG and FLT accumulation (defined as low vs high) and biological markers (defined as negative/weak vs positive expression), a Fisher’s exact test was performed. Median values were used as cut-off levels. The strength of association between ordinal variables was represented by Spearman’s rank correlation.