Nonthermal ablation by using intravascular oxygen radical generation with WST11: Dynamic tissue effects and implications for focal therapy Journal Article


Authors: Kimm, S. Y.; Tarin, T. V.; Monette, S.; Srimathveeravalli, G.; Gerber, D.; Durack, J. C.; Solomon, S. B.; Scardino, P. T.; Scherz, A.; Coleman, J.
Article Title: Nonthermal ablation by using intravascular oxygen radical generation with WST11: Dynamic tissue effects and implications for focal therapy
Abstract: Purpose: To examine the hypothesis that vascular-targeted photodynamic therapy (VTP) with WST11 and clinically relevant parameters can be used to ablate target tissues in a non-tumor-bearing large-animal model while selectively sparing blood vessels and collagen. Materials and Methods: By using an institutional animal care and use committee-approved protocol, 68 ablations were performed in the kidneys (cortex and medulla) and livers of 27 adult pigs. Posttreatment evaluation was conducted with contrast material-enhanced computed tomography in the live animals at 24 hours. Immunohistochemistry was evaluated and histologic examination with hematoxylineosin staining was performed at 4 hours, 24 hours, and 7 days. Intravenous infusion of WST11 (4 mg per kilogram of body weight) was followed by using near-infrared illumination (753 nm for 20 minutes) through optical fibers prepositioned in target tissues by using a fixed template. Treated areas were scanned, measured, and statistically analyzed by using the Student t test and two-way analysis of variance. Results: Focal WST11 VTP treatment in the liver and kidney by using a single optical fiber resulted in well-demarcated cylindrical zones of nonthermal necrosis concentrically oriented around the light-emitting diffuser, with no intervening viable parenchymal cells. The radius of ablated tissue increased from approximately 5 mm at 150 mW to approximately 7 mm at 415 mW (P<.01). Illumination through fiber triads at 1-cm separation resulted in confluent homogeneous necrosis. Patterns of acute injury within 24 hours were consistent with microcirculatory flow arrest and collagen preservation (demonstrated with trichrome staining). In the peripheral ablation zone, blood vessels at least 40 μm in diameter were selectively preserved and remained functional at 7 days. Ablated tissues exhibited progressive fibrosis and chronic inflammatory cell infiltrates. No histologic changes consistent with thermal injury were observed in blood vessels or collagen. The renal hilum and collecting system did not show treatment effect, despite treatment proximity. Conclusion: WST11 VTP induces nonthermal tissue ablation in target tissue while preserving critical organ structures and bystander blood vessels within solid organs. © RSNA, 2016.
Journal Title: Radiology
Volume: 281
Issue: 1
ISSN: 0033-8419
Publisher: Radiological Society of North America, Inc.  
Date Published: 2016-10-01
Start Page: 109
End Page: 118
Language: English
DOI: 10.1148/radiol.2016141571
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC5047127
PUBMED: 26986047
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 2 November 2016 -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Jonathan Coleman
    341 Coleman
  2. Peter T Scardino
    671 Scardino
  3. Stephen Solomon
    422 Solomon
  4. Sebastien Monette
    148 Monette
  5. Simon Yoon Kimm
    8 Kimm
  6. Jeremy Charles Durack
    116 Durack
  7. Daniel Charles Gerber
    1 Gerber