Automated Quantification of Early Bone Alterations and Pathological Bone Turnover in Experimental Arthritis by in vivo PET/CT Imaging

Abstract The assessment of bone damage is required to evaluate disease severity and treatment efficacy both in arthritis patients and in experimental arthritis models. Today there is still a lack of in vivo methods that enable the quantification of arthritic processes at an early stage of the diseas...

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Main Authors: Bianca Hoffmann, Carl-Magnus Svensson, Maria Straßburger, Björn Gebser, Ingo M. Irmler, Thomas Kamradt, Hans Peter Saluz, Marc Thilo Figge
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2017-05-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-02389-6
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spelling doaj-cacc0218165e466c83adae775fca26db2020-12-08T00:18:13ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222017-05-017111210.1038/s41598-017-02389-6Automated Quantification of Early Bone Alterations and Pathological Bone Turnover in Experimental Arthritis by in vivo PET/CT ImagingBianca Hoffmann0Carl-Magnus Svensson1Maria Straßburger2Björn Gebser3Ingo M. Irmler4Thomas Kamradt5Hans Peter Saluz6Marc Thilo Figge7Departemet Cell and Molecular Biology, Leibniz-Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology, Hans-Knöll-InstituteApplied Systems Biology, Leibniz-Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology, Hans-Knöll-InstituteTransfer Group Anti-infectives, Leibniz-Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology, Hans-Knöll-InstituteDepartemet Cell and Molecular Biology, Leibniz-Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology, Hans-Knöll-InstituteInstitute of Immunology, Jena University HospitalInstitute of Immunology, Jena University HospitalDepartemet Cell and Molecular Biology, Leibniz-Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology, Hans-Knöll-InstituteFriedrich Schiller UniversityAbstract The assessment of bone damage is required to evaluate disease severity and treatment efficacy both in arthritis patients and in experimental arthritis models. Today there is still a lack of in vivo methods that enable the quantification of arthritic processes at an early stage of the disease. We performed longitudinal in vivo imaging with [18F]-fluoride PET/CT before and after experimental arthritis onset for diseased and control DBA/1 mice and assessed arthritis progression by clinical scoring, tracer uptake studies and bone volume as well as surface roughness measurements. Arthritic animals showed significantly increased tracer uptake in the paws compared to non-diseased controls. Automated CT image analysis revealed increased bone surface roughness already in the earliest stage of the disease. Moreover, we observed clear differences between endosteal and periosteal sites of cortical bone regarding surface roughness. This study shows that in vivo PET/CT imaging is a favorable method to study arthritic processes, enabling the quantification of different aspects of the disease like pathological bone turnover and bone alteration. Especially the evaluation of bone surface roughness is sensitive to early pathological changes and can be applied to study the dynamics of bone erosion at different sites of the bones in an automated fashion.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-02389-6
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bianca Hoffmann
Carl-Magnus Svensson
Maria Straßburger
Björn Gebser
Ingo M. Irmler
Thomas Kamradt
Hans Peter Saluz
Marc Thilo Figge
spellingShingle Bianca Hoffmann
Carl-Magnus Svensson
Maria Straßburger
Björn Gebser
Ingo M. Irmler
Thomas Kamradt
Hans Peter Saluz
Marc Thilo Figge
Automated Quantification of Early Bone Alterations and Pathological Bone Turnover in Experimental Arthritis by in vivo PET/CT Imaging
Scientific Reports
author_facet Bianca Hoffmann
Carl-Magnus Svensson
Maria Straßburger
Björn Gebser
Ingo M. Irmler
Thomas Kamradt
Hans Peter Saluz
Marc Thilo Figge
author_sort Bianca Hoffmann
title Automated Quantification of Early Bone Alterations and Pathological Bone Turnover in Experimental Arthritis by in vivo PET/CT Imaging
title_short Automated Quantification of Early Bone Alterations and Pathological Bone Turnover in Experimental Arthritis by in vivo PET/CT Imaging
title_full Automated Quantification of Early Bone Alterations and Pathological Bone Turnover in Experimental Arthritis by in vivo PET/CT Imaging
title_fullStr Automated Quantification of Early Bone Alterations and Pathological Bone Turnover in Experimental Arthritis by in vivo PET/CT Imaging
title_full_unstemmed Automated Quantification of Early Bone Alterations and Pathological Bone Turnover in Experimental Arthritis by in vivo PET/CT Imaging
title_sort automated quantification of early bone alterations and pathological bone turnover in experimental arthritis by in vivo pet/ct imaging
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2017-05-01
description Abstract The assessment of bone damage is required to evaluate disease severity and treatment efficacy both in arthritis patients and in experimental arthritis models. Today there is still a lack of in vivo methods that enable the quantification of arthritic processes at an early stage of the disease. We performed longitudinal in vivo imaging with [18F]-fluoride PET/CT before and after experimental arthritis onset for diseased and control DBA/1 mice and assessed arthritis progression by clinical scoring, tracer uptake studies and bone volume as well as surface roughness measurements. Arthritic animals showed significantly increased tracer uptake in the paws compared to non-diseased controls. Automated CT image analysis revealed increased bone surface roughness already in the earliest stage of the disease. Moreover, we observed clear differences between endosteal and periosteal sites of cortical bone regarding surface roughness. This study shows that in vivo PET/CT imaging is a favorable method to study arthritic processes, enabling the quantification of different aspects of the disease like pathological bone turnover and bone alteration. Especially the evaluation of bone surface roughness is sensitive to early pathological changes and can be applied to study the dynamics of bone erosion at different sites of the bones in an automated fashion.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-02389-6
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