Purpose: S-[11C]-methyl-L-cysteine ([11C]MCYS) has been claimed to offer higher tumor selectivity than L-[methyl-11C]methionine ([11C]MET). We examined this claim in animal models. Procedures: Rats with implanted untreated (n = 10) or irradiated (n = 7, 1 × 25 Gy, on day 8) orthotopic gliomas were scanned after 6, 9, and 12 days, using positron emission tomography. Rats with striatal injections of saline (n = 9) or bacterial lipopolysaccharide (n = 9) were scanned after 3 days. Results: Uptake of the two tracers in untreated gliomas was similar. [11C]MCYS was not accumulated in salivary glands, nasal epithelium, and healing wounds, in contrast to [11C]MET, but showed 40 % higher accumulation in the healthy brain. Both tracers showed a reduced tumor uptake 4 days after irradiation and minor accumulation in inflamed striatum. [11C]MCYS indicated higher lesion volumes than [11C]MET (untreated tumor + 47 %; irradiated tumor up to + 500 %; LPS-inflamed striatum + 240 %). Conclusions: [11C]MCYS was less accumulated in some non-tumor tissues than [11C]MET, but showed lower tumor-to-brain contrast.
CITATION STYLE
Parente, A., van Waarde, A., Shoji, A., de Paula Faria, D., Maas, B., Zijlma, R., … Doorduin, J. (2018). PET Imaging with S-[11C]Methyl-L-Cysteine and L-[Methyl-11C]Methionine in Rat Models of Glioma, Glioma Radiotherapy, and Neuroinflammation. Molecular Imaging and Biology, 20(3), 465–472. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11307-017-1137-z
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