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Warburg revisited: imaging tumour blood flow and metabolism
Abstract
In the 1930s, Otto Warburg reported that anaerobic metabolism of glucose is a fundamental property of all tumours,
even in the presence of an adequate oxygen supply. He also demonstrated a relationship between the degree of
anaerobic metabolism and tumour growth rate. Today, this phenomenon forms the basis of tumour imaging with
fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET). More recently, Folkman has demonstrated that
malignant growth and survival are also dependent on tumour vascularity which is increasingly evaluated in vivo
using techniques such as contrast enhanced computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
Although it is reasonable to hypothesise that the metabolic requirements of tumours are mirrored by alterations in
tumour haemodynamics, the relationship between tumour blood flow and metabolism is in fact complex. A well developed
tumour vascular supply is required to ensure a sufficient delivery of glucose and oxygen to support the
metabolism essential for tumour growth. However, an inadequate vascularisation of tumour will result in hypoxia, a
factor that is known to stimulate anaerobic metabolism of glucose. Thus, the balance between tumour blood flow
and metabolism will be an important indicator of the biological status of a tumour and hence the tumour's likely
progression and response to treatment. This article reviews the molecular biology of tumour vascularisation and
metabolism, relating these processes to currently available imaging techniques while summarising the imaging studies
that have compared tumour blood flow and metabolism. The potential for vascular metabolic imaging to assess
tumour aggression and sub-classify treatment response is highlighted.
Author
K.A Miles and R.E Williams
Contact Details
Corresponding address: Ken Miles, Professor of Imaging, Brighton & Sussex Medical School, Brighton, BN1 9PX, UK
Reference
ICIS Cancer Imaging Volume 8 Issue 1
DOI: 10.1102/1470-7330.2008.0011
Date Posted
25 March 2008
Open Access is provided for this article.
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