Molecular imaging of akt enables early prediction of response to molecular targeted therapy

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Abstract

Development of noninvasive, real-time molecular imaging tools to assess responsiveness of a given therapy may be a critical component of the success of individualized therapy approach for patients. Toward this, we have previously developed and validated molecular sensors for Akt and caspase-3 activity, and in this report, we have explored the utility of these reporters in assessing the responsiveness of tumors to a combination of gemcitabine (Gem) and cetuximab (Cet) delivered in two opposite schedules. We found that human head and neck cancer (UMSCC1) xenografts responded significantly better in a schedule where cetuximab was administered after gemcitabine when compared with the schedule of cetuximab followed by gemcitabine. Wilcoxon two-sample tests suggested that the difference in tumor volumes in two schedules became significant on day 7 (P >.05 on day 4, and P

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Bhojani, M. S., Nyati, M. K., Zhao, L., Normolle, D. P., Ross, B. D., Lawrence, T. S., & Rehemtulla, A. (2011). Molecular imaging of akt enables early prediction of response to molecular targeted therapy. Translational Oncology, 4(3), 122–125. https://doi.org/10.1593/tlo.11112

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