Fluorodeoxyglucose Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography Imaging Predicts Vein Wall Scarring and Statin Benefit in Murine Venous Thrombosis.

CIRCULATION-CARDIOVASCULAR IMAGING(2021)

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Abstract
BACKGROUND:The postthrombotic syndrome is a common, often morbid sequela of venous thrombosis (VT) that arises from thrombus persistence and inflammatory scarring of juxtaposed vein walls and valves. Noninvasive 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) imaging can measure neutrophil inflammation in VT. Here, we hypothesized (1) early fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (FDG-PET/CT) VT inflammation can predict subsequent vein wall scarring (VWS) and (2) statin therapy can reduce FDG-PET VT inflammation and subsequent VWS. METHODS:C57BL/6J mice (n=75) underwent induction of stasis-induced VT of the inferior vena cava or jugular vein. Inferior vena cava VT mice (n=44) were randomized to daily oral rosuvastatin 5 mg/kg or saline starting at day -1. Subgroups of mice then underwent FDG-PET/CT 2 days after VT induction. On day 14, a subset of mice was euthanized, and VWS was assessed via histology. In vitro studies were further performed on bone marrow-derived neutrophils. RESULTS:Statin therapy reduced early day 2 FDG-PET VT inflammation, thrombus neutrophil influx, and plasma IL (interleukin)-6 levels. At day 14, statin therapy reduced VWS but did not affect day 2 thrombus mass, cholesterol, or white blood counts, nor reduce day 2 glucose transporter 1 or myeloperoxidase expression in thrombus or in isolated neutrophils. In survival studies, the day 2 FDG-PET VT inflammation signal as measured by mean and maximum standardized uptake values predicted the extent of day 14 VWS (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve =0.82) with a strong correlation coefficient (r) of r=0.73 and r=0.74, respectively. Mediation analyses revealed that 40% of the statin-induced VWS reduction was mediated by reductions in VT inflammation as quantified by FDG-PET. CONCLUSIONS:Early noninvasive FDG-PET/CT imaging of VT inflammation predicts the magnitude of subsequent VWS and may provide a new translatable approach to identify individuals at risk for postthrombotic syndrome and to assess anti-inflammatory postthrombotic syndrome therapies, such as statins.
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Key words
18F-fluorodeoxyglucose, inflammation, jugular veins, neutrophils, positron-emission tomography, post thrombotic syndrome, venous thrombosis
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