Intravenous MRI contrast agents are commonly used to improve the detection of intracranial tumors and other central nervous system (CNS) lesions for diagnosis and treatment planning. Two small-molecule, albumin-binding blood pool contrast agents (MP-2269 and MS-325) of potential clinical significance were evaluated at 1.5 Tesla in a mouse glioma model and compared with an extracellular contrast agent (OptiMARK). Tumor image contrast was significantly enhanced and long-lived following administration of 30 μmole/kg of the blood pool agents: specifically, contrast enhancement peaked slowly at 25-30 min following administration, remained constant for >3 hr, and returned to baseline within 20 hr. Comparable but "transient" enhancement was achieved using 100 μmole/kg Opti-MARK: specifically, contrast enhancement peaked rapidly at 2-5 min following administration and then declined over 40 min. The blood pool contrast agents demonstrated an approximately threefold increased dose-effectiveness and a lengthened window of tumor contrast enhancement in comparison to commonly available extracellular contrast agents. This demonstrates the potential of alternative contrast-enhanced (CE) MRI examination protocols for tumor detection. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Adzamli, K., Yablonskiy, D. A., Chicoine, M. R., Won, E. K., Galen, K. P., Zahner, M. C., … Ackerman, J. J. H. (2003). Albumin-binding MR blood pool agents as MRI contrast agents in an intracranial mouse glioma model. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 49(3), 586–590. https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.10382
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