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In Vivo Staging the Progression of Colitis and Associated Cancer by Concurrent Microimaging of Key Biomarkers. | LitMetric

In Vivo Staging the Progression of Colitis and Associated Cancer by Concurrent Microimaging of Key Biomarkers.

Anal Chem

State Key Laboratory of Natural Medicine, Department of Biomedical Engineering, School of Engineering, China Pharmaceutical University, Nanjing 211198, China.

Published: July 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Current colorectal cancer staging relies on invasive surgery and ex vivo analysis, creating a need for noninvasive methods to diagnose the disease at various stages.
  • Research identified VEGFR2 and PTGER4 as key biomarkers that increase in expression from colitis to adenoma and carcinoma stages, enabling potential in vivo diagnostic applications.
  • The effectiveness of using confocal laser endoscopy (CLE) for noninvasive CRC staging was demonstrated in mouse models, showing a correlation between biomarker levels and structural changes in the colon, which could aid in timely and accurate treatment decisions for patients.

Article Abstract

Currently colorectal cancer (CRC) staging (colitis, adenoma, and carcinoma) mainly relies on ex vivo pathologic analysis requiring an invasive surgical process with limited sample collection and increased metastatic risk. Thus, in vivo noninvasive pathological diagnosis is extremely demanded. By verifying the samples of clinical patients and CRC mouse models, it was found that vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 (VEGFR2) was barely expressed in the colitis stage and only appeared in adenoma and carcinoma stages with obvious elevation, while prostaglandin E receptor 4 (PTGER4) could be observed from colitis to adenoma and carcinoma stages with a gradient increase of expression. VEGFR2 and PTGER4 were further chosen as key biomarkers for molecular pathological diagnosis in vivo and corresponding molecular probes were constructed. The feasibility of in vivo noninvasive CRC staging by concurrent microimaging of dual biomarkers using confocal laser endoscopy (CLE) was verified in CRC mouse models and further confirmed by ex vivo pathological analysis. In vivo CLE imaging exhibited the correlation of severe colonic crypt structural alteration with a higher biomarker expression in adenoma and carcinoma stages. This strategy shows promise in benefiting patients undergoing CRC progression with in-time, noninvasive, and precise pathological staging, thus providing valuable guidance for selecting therapeutic strategies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.3c00907DOI Listing

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