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Multiplexed imaging in oncology.

Chrysafis AndreouRalph WeisslederMoritz F Kircher
Published in: Nature biomedical engineering (2022)
In oncology, technologies for clinical molecular imaging are used to diagnose patients, establish the efficacy of treatments and monitor the recurrence of disease. Multiplexed methods increase the number of disease-specific biomarkers that can be detected simultaneously, such as the overexpression of oncogenic proteins, aberrant metabolite uptake and anomalous blood perfusion. The quantitative localization of each biomarker could considerably increase the specificity and the accuracy of technologies for clinical molecular imaging to facilitate granular diagnoses, patient stratification and earlier assessments of the responses to administered therapeutics. In this Review, we discuss established techniques for multiplexed imaging and the most promising emerging multiplexing technologies applied to the imaging of isolated tissues and cells and to non-invasive whole-body imaging. We also highlight advances in radiology that have been made possible by multiplexed imaging.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • single cell
  • end stage renal disease
  • gene expression
  • chronic kidney disease
  • transcription factor
  • induced apoptosis
  • computed tomography
  • magnetic resonance
  • newly diagnosed
  • contrast enhanced