Early detection of doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity in rats by its cardiac metabolic signature assessed with hyperpolarized MRI.
Kerstin N TimmCharith PereraVicky BallJohn Aaron HenryJack J MillerMatthew KerrJames A WestEshita SharmaJohn BroxholmeAngela LoganDragana SavicMichael S DoddJulian Leether GriffinMichael P MurphyLisa C HeatherDamian J TylerPublished in: Communications biology (2020)
Doxorubicin (DOX) is a widely used chemotherapeutic agent that can cause serious cardiotoxic side effects culminating in congestive heart failure (HF). There are currently no clinical imaging techniques or biomarkers available to detect DOX-cardiotoxicity before functional decline. Mitochondrial dysfunction is thought to be a key factor driving functional decline, though real-time metabolic fluxes have never been assessed in DOX-cardiotoxicity. Hyperpolarized magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can assess real-time metabolic fluxes in vivo. Here we show that cardiac functional decline in a clinically relevant rat-model of DOX-HF is preceded by a change in oxidative mitochondrial carbohydrate metabolism, measured by hyperpolarized MRI. The decreased metabolic fluxes were predominantly due to mitochondrial loss and additional mitochondrial dysfunction, and not, as widely assumed hitherto, to oxidative stress. Since hyperpolarized MRI has been successfully translated into clinical trials this opens up the potential to test cancer patients receiving DOX for early signs of cardiotoxicity.
Keyphrases
- magnetic resonance imaging
- contrast enhanced
- oxidative stress
- heart failure
- diffusion weighted imaging
- clinical trial
- left ventricular
- diabetic rats
- computed tomography
- drug delivery
- magnetic resonance
- cancer therapy
- papillary thyroid
- high glucose
- atrial fibrillation
- photodynamic therapy
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- lymph node metastasis
- climate change
- african american
- fluorescence imaging
- cardiac resynchronization therapy