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1 From the Department of Radiology, Division of Nuclear Medicine, Thomas
Jefferson University Medical College, 1020 Locust St, Suite 359 JAH,
Philadelphia, PA 19107
2 Saanichton, British Columbia, Canada (B.C.L.).
Received July 11, 2005; accepted after revision July 12, 2005.
The focus of the meeting was to consider how to prepare the imaging
community at large for the future and to begin to examine some of the
implications of molecular imaging in terms of education and intersociety
relations.
Keywords: functional imaging fusion imaging molecular imaging PET
The Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) and the Society of Nuclear Medicine (SNM) jointly convened a workshop on molecular imaging (MI) in April 2005. The purpose was to anticipate the changes in the imaging sciences that might result as molecular biology, nanotechnology, genomics, and proteomics increasingly impact on everyday medical practice in general and on imaging in particular [24].
The meeting was attended by physicians, scientists, and staff representing the Academy of Molecular Imaging (AMI), the American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM), the American Board of Nuclear Medicine (ABNM), the American Board of Radiology (ABR), the American College of Radiology (ACR), the American Roentgen Ray Society (ARRS), the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology (ASNC), the Canadian Association of Radiologists (CAR), the Canadian Association/Society of Nuclear Medicine (CASNM), the European Congress of Radiology (ECR), the Federación Mexicana de Radiología e Imagen (FMRI), the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (ISMRM), the RSNA, the Society for Molecular Imaging (SMI), the SNM, and the Society of Radiopharmaceutical Sciences (SRC).
MI is not new. Many speakers reflected that the one context in which the concept has already reached the bedside is the use of 18F FDG (FDG) PET, principally in cancer diagnosis. Nevertheless, on the horizon and in the laboratory are diagnostic and therapeutic techniques that will change medical practice and that represent a potentially important future for imaging scientists and physicians.
The focus of the meeting was to consider how to prepare the imaging community at large for that future and to begin to examine some of the implications of MI in terms of education and intersociety relations.
Round Table
To begin, speakers from each organization briefly reviewed the status quo in the body they represented. The specialty societies represented had all, in some way, moved to address what they saw as their future. This involved some or all of the following educational or developmental tools: (a) educational programs in the elements of MI; (b) plenary lectures at major meetings on related topics; (c) symposia or workshops addressing molecular biology, genomics, et cetera; (d) providing grant support to investigators addressing research questions relevant to the field of MI; (e) creation of "paper" institutes addressing MI within the structure of individual societies; and (f) participation in U.S. national initiatives to map and promote imaging research in general and MI research in particular.
Society representatives were able to briefly review and illustrate, based on their laboratory and clinical perspective, the status of MI both in animal research and in clinical applications. Discussion ranged over small-animal imaging devices for CT, MRI, and optical imaging, and human-scale devices employing FDG PET, PET with other MI probes, MR spectroscopy and, perhaps, optical imaging.
Dr Tom Miller, representing the ABNM, emphasized that the future involves not just MI but molecular and anatomic correlation. This reality will have implications for the education not only of nuclear physicians, but also of radiologists. The former will need to learn cross-sectional anatomy; the latter, the concepts of tracer techniques and functional imaging.
Entities such as the SNM Center of Excellence in Molecular Imaging represent potential foci around which broadly based programs might develop. Equally, the AMI has four institutes focused on clinical MI, MI technology, and imaging in drug development, and an industry forum for promoting MI technology.
Of the known hallmarks of cancer, molecular probes already have the potential to interrogate, for example, hypoxia (misonidazole), angiogenesis (AVß3 integrin), glucose metabolism (labeled FDG), amino acid metabolism (labeled tyrosine, methionine), tumor cell proliferation (labeled thymidine), and others. Other potential applications will arise in the context of an improved understanding of genomics. In MI, combined technologies such as PET/MRI and MRI/ultrasound are likely to follow where PET/CT has led.
The applicability of MI is also not limited to cancer and its treatment. It already promises to change the diagnosis and understanding of Alzheimer disease, to cite but one example.
Importantly, MI is likely to lead to a further blurring of the distinction between diagnosis and treatment and to a paradigm shift to early diagnosis that leads to image-guided, individualized molecular therapy. Further, when in therapy, biomarkers will be able to be imaged and quantified to provide early evidence of the efficacy of the treatment.
The ubiquitous interest in MI was reflected in the presence of representatives from the ASNC and international imaging societies. The representatives from ASNC reported that their meetings have already featured symposia on MI. The ISMRM representatives reported the creation of a Study Group on Molecular and Cellular Imaging; the organization of an ISMRM workshop on MI in 2003, in addition to the fast growing attention to MI at the ISMRM annual meeting; and other ISMRM symposia.
The SNM had articulated a goal "to harness the power of MI and molecular therapeutics in search of better and more effective means to manage diseases and improve the quality of life for patients."
Of note, the ECR had emphasized MI in its courses over the most recent 2 years, while recognizing it as unlikely that European centers would enjoy the financial support available, at least until now, in the United States. The response in Europe is to foster networks that link existing groups of physicians and physician-scientists instead of relying on "monolithic" advanced centers.
A Definition
A number of concise and elegant definitions of MI have been developed, notably by Weissleder and colleagues [5,6]. Massoud and Gambhir [7] and Herschmann [8] Nevertheless, the group believed it should go beyond these.
A traditional distinction has been made between anatomicor structuralimaging and functionalor physiologicimaging. Simplistically, that distinction had, historically, been made between techniques such as CT and nuclear medicine methods as being, respectively, anatomic and functional. However, that simple distinction has increasingly become blurred by CT, MRI, and other techniques that provide both functional and structural information, while fusion techniques such as PET/CT represent a hybridization of diagnostic methods.
Most of functional imaging is also MI, but not all. BOLD (blood oxygen leveldependent) and diffusion-tensor sequences in MR and magnetoencephalography are somefar from exclusiveexamples of functional imaging that do not address biologic events on the molecular scale. Given these considerations, the group developed the following definition of MI, successfully testing it against the existing variety of imaging tools available in humans and in animal experimental contexts:
MI techniques directly or indirectly monitor and record the spatiotemporal distribution of molecular or cellular processes for biochemical, biologic, diagnostic, or therapeutic applications.
Education
There was a broad consensus that no one single educational program would fit the range of scientists and clinicians involved in MI. Traditionally, the graduate studentpostdoctoral stream addresses its educational needs on a point-of-need basis. The inherent diversity of research and development in MI makes this appropriate. There might be merit in making an inventory of institutes involved in MI, along with the core MI activities within each, to facilitate graduate and undergraduate studies. While basic science research is inherently self-sustaining in terms of intellectual content, there are disturbing signs of declining financial support for MI investigations as the United States realigns its research priorities.
Some of the skill sets involved in MI include appropriate elements of physics, chemistry, molecular biology, genomics, statistics, mathematic modeling, et cetera. Any attempt at development of a standardized curriculum might only be usefully directed to clinical imagers, in recognition of the diversity of the disciplines involved.
A further educational challenge consists in awareness raising among potential referring physicians and, not least, the public at large.
For the clinical application of MI, 1-year fellowships are desirable, with MI being promoted as a translational research tool. In the longer term, the basic science components of education in the radiologic sciences may need to be diversified beyond medical physics, radiopharmacology, and radiobiology. Above all, the present communication chasm between basic scientists and clinicians must be overcome for MI to realize its potential to reinvent radiologic science.
As clinical practice evolves, MI is inherently directed to disease processes (cancer, genetic disorders, neurodegenerative disease, etc) and does not readily align with the current paradigms of organ-based or machine-based imaging services. In the longer term, the radiologic sciences may need to evolve away from organ-based to disease-based subspecialization.
The group was of the opinion that it is not yet the time for board recognition of MI, even if that were practical or desirable. Nevertheless, to build toward the future, it is not too early for education in radiology and nuclear medicine to include content in molecular biology, genomics, and gene therapy, et cetera.
The realization is that radiochemists are becoming an endangered species. The United States has for decades been a net importer of chemists. However, in the post 9/11 world, abundant external sources of talent might no longer be available.
Goals to Be Met in Advancing MI
Conclusions
A sense of common purpose among those attending emerged, together with the sense that the meeting was a timely one in historical terms. These considerations emboldened the group to move to a series of proactive recommendations, as follows:
Postscript
Dr Henry Wagner, in one of his archetypical, not to say renowned, program summations of the SNM annual meetings, once remarked about nuclear medicine as it reached one of its crossroads that "it is wrong to reach a turning point and not turn" [9]. That remark may now be capable of being generalized in the evolution of all of the radiologic sciences. The sense of the meeting was that it proved a timely reminder that imaging techniques as a whole are at a crossroads with respect to MI. We owe it to our successors to ensure that, at this particular turning point, we do indeed also turn.
Acknowledgments
List of participants (in alphabetical order): Dr Philip Alderson (ABR, ACR), Lynn Barnes (SNM), Dr Gary Becker (RSNA), Dr John Boone (AAPM), Dr Linda Bresolin (RSNA), Dr Steve Burrell (CAR), Dr Peter Conti (SNM), Dr Johannes Czernin (AMI), Dr Jeffrey Duerk (ISMRM), Dr William Eckelman (SRS), Dr Guillermo Elizondo-Riojas (FMRI), Dave Fellers (RSNA), Dr David Glover (ASNC), Dr Robert Gropler (ASNC), Becky Haines (ARRS), Dr Christian Herold (ECR), Dr Brian C. Lentle (RSNA), Dr Thomas Meade (SMI), Dr Tom Miller (ABNM), Dr Chrit Moonen (ISMRM), VA Pappas (SNM), Dr J. Anthony Parker (ABNM), Kim Pierce (AMI), Dr James Provenzale (ARRS), Dr E. Russell Ritenour (AAPM), Gregg Robinson (SNM), Dr Henry Royal (ABNM), Tracy Schmidt (RSNA), Dr Mathew Thakur (SNM), Dr Jean-Luc Urbain (CASNM).
References
This article has been cited by other articles:
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J. M. Provenzale Molecular Imaging: Facing the Future Am. J. Roentgenol., February 1, 2006; 186(2): 287 - 288. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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