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Stroke. 2009;40:270-277
Published online before print October 23, 2008, doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.108.517474
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(Stroke. 2009;40:270.)
© 2009 American Heart Association, Inc.


Original Contributions

Positron Emission Tomography Imaging of Poststroke Angiogenesis

Weibo Cai, PhD; Raphael Guzman, MD; Andrew R. Hsu, BS; Hui Wang, PhD; Kai Chen, PhD; Guohua Sun, MD, PhD; Atul Gera, BS; Raymond Choi, BS; Tonya Bliss, PhD; Lina He, MD; Zi-Bo Li, PhD; Anne-Lise D. Maag, BS; Nobutaka Hori, MD, PhD; Heng Zhao, PhD; Michael Moseley, PhD; Gary K. Steinberg, MD, PhD Xiaoyuan Chen, PhD

From The Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford (W.C., A.R.H, H.W., L.H., K.C., Z-B.L., M.M., X.C.), Department of Radiology, Stanford University, Calif; Departments of Radiology and Medical Physics (W.C.), University of Wisconsin–Madison, Wis; Department of Neurosurgery (R.G., G.S., A.G., R.C., T.B., A-L.D.M., N.H., H.Z., G.K.S.), Stanford University, Calif.

Correspondence to Xiaoyuan Chen, PhD, The Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford, Department of Radiology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA. E-mail shawchen{at}stanford.edu

Background and Purpose— Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and VEGF receptors (VEGFRs) play important roles during neurovascular repair after stroke. In this study, we imaged VEGFR expression with positron emission tomography (PET) to noninvasively analyze poststroke angiogenesis.

Methods— Female Sprague-Dawley rats after distal middle cerebral artery occlusion surgery were subjected to weekly MRI, 18F-FDG PET, and 64Cu-DOTA-VEGF121 PET scans. Several control experiments were performed to confirm the VEGFR specificity of 64Cu-DOTA-VEGF121 uptake in the stroke border zone. VEGFR, BrdU, lectin staining, and 125I-VEGF165 autoradiography on stroke brain tissue slices were performed to validate the in vivo findings.

Results— T2-weighed MRI correlated with the "cold spot" on 18F-FDG PET for rats undergoing distal middle cerebral artery occlusion surgery. The 64Cu-DOTA-VEGF121 uptake in the stroke border zone peaked at {approx}10 days after surgery, indicating neovascularization as confirmed by histology (VEGFR-2, BrdU, and lectin staining). VEGFR specificity of 64Cu-DOTA-VEGF121 uptake was confirmed by significantly lower uptake of 64Cu-DOTA-VEGFmutant in vivo and intense 125I-VEGF165 uptake ex vivo in the stroke border zone. No appreciable uptake of 64Cu-DOTA-VEGF121 was observed in the brain of sham-operated rats.

Conclusions— For the first time to our knowledge, we successfully evaluated the VEGFR expression kinetics noninvasively in a rat stroke model. In vivo imaging of VEGFR expression could become a significant clinical tool to plan and monitor therapies aimed at improving poststroke angiogenesis.


Key Words: positron emission tomography • stroke • vascular endothelial growth factor receptor