posted on 2018-09-14, 00:00authored bySabrina Kröger, Ann-Christin Niehoff, Astrid Jeibmann, Michael Sperling, Werner Paulus, Walter Stummer, Uwe Karst
Fluorescence-guided surgery (FGS)
has been established as a powerful
technique for glioblastoma resection. After oral application of the
prodrug 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA), protoporphyrin IX (PpIX) is
formed as an intermediate of the heme-biosynthesis cascade and accumulates
within the tumor. By intraoperative fluorescence microscopy, the specific
PpIX fluorescence can be used to differentiate the tumor from healthy
brain tissue. To investigate possible limitations of fluorescence
diagnosis, the complementary use of molecular and elemental mass-spectrometry
imaging (MSI) is presented. Matrix-assisted laser-desorption–ionization
mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) is used to examine the distribution of
PpIX and heme b in human brain tumors. MALDI-MS/MS imaging is performed
to validate MS data and improve the signal-to-noise ratio (S/N). Comparing
the imaging results with histological evaluation, increased PpIX accumulation
in areas of high tumor-cell density is observed. Heme b accumulation are only found in areas of blood vessels and hemorrhage,
confirming the hampered transformation from PpIX to heme b in glioblastoma
tissue. Investigation of non-neoplastic brain tissue and glioblastoma
resected without external 5-ALA administration as control samples
with true-negative fluorescence verified the absence of PpIX accumulation.
Analysis of necrotic tumor tissue and gliosarcoma, one rare type of
glioma appearing nonfluorescent during FGS, as case examples with
false-negative-fluorescence diagnosis, revealed the absence of significant
amounts of PpIX, indicating an impairment of PpIX formation. Molecular
analysis is complemented by quantitative laser ablation–inductively
coupled plasma (LA-ICP) MSI correlating heme b and Fe distribution.
Mathematical pixel-by-pixel correlation of molecular and elemental
data revealed a positive correlation with heteroscedasticity for the
spatially resolved heme b signal intensities and Fe concentrations.