Imaging has become an indispensable tool in the study of cancer biology and in clinical prognosis and treatment. The rapid advances in high resolution fluorescent imaging at single cell level and MR/PET/CT image registration, combined with new molecular probes of cell types and metabolic states, will allow the physical scales imaged by each to be bridged. This holds the promise of translation of basic science insights at the single cell level to clinical application. In this article, we describe the recent advances in imaging at the macro- and micro-scale and how these advances are synergistic with new imaging agents, reporters, and labeling schemes. Examples of new insights derived from the different scales of imaging and relevant probes a...
The convergence of molecular and genetic disciplines with non-invasive imaging technologies has prov...
A promising role of cellular therapies in cancer treatment is reflected by the constantly growing nu...
The recent emergence of “molecular imaging ” as anintegrated discipline in academic medical centers ...
Imaging has become an indispensable tool in the study of cancer biology and in clinical prognosis an...
We review novel, in vivo and tissue-based imaging technologies that monitor and optimize cancer ther...
Although most clinical diagnostic imaging studies employ anatomic techniques such as computed tomogr...
Cancer affects people worldwide, causing approximately 9.6 million deaths in 2018 globally. Although...
Over the past few decades, great strides have been made in anatomical imaging of disease that has le...
Item does not contain fulltextTargeted treatment has substantially changed the field of oncology. Co...
In the last decade, PET-only systems have been phased out and replaced with PET-CT systems. This mer...
Effective patient selection before or early during treatment is important to increasing the therapeu...
The ability to identify key biomolecules and molecular changes associated with cancer malignancy and...
Advances in molecular imaging, combined with the goal of personalized cancer therapy, call for new a...
Preclinical studies usually require high levels of morphological, functional, and biochemical inform...
The present status of cancer molecular imaging (MI) with nuclear medicine techniques is reviewed, hi...
The convergence of molecular and genetic disciplines with non-invasive imaging technologies has prov...
A promising role of cellular therapies in cancer treatment is reflected by the constantly growing nu...
The recent emergence of “molecular imaging ” as anintegrated discipline in academic medical centers ...
Imaging has become an indispensable tool in the study of cancer biology and in clinical prognosis an...
We review novel, in vivo and tissue-based imaging technologies that monitor and optimize cancer ther...
Although most clinical diagnostic imaging studies employ anatomic techniques such as computed tomogr...
Cancer affects people worldwide, causing approximately 9.6 million deaths in 2018 globally. Although...
Over the past few decades, great strides have been made in anatomical imaging of disease that has le...
Item does not contain fulltextTargeted treatment has substantially changed the field of oncology. Co...
In the last decade, PET-only systems have been phased out and replaced with PET-CT systems. This mer...
Effective patient selection before or early during treatment is important to increasing the therapeu...
The ability to identify key biomolecules and molecular changes associated with cancer malignancy and...
Advances in molecular imaging, combined with the goal of personalized cancer therapy, call for new a...
Preclinical studies usually require high levels of morphological, functional, and biochemical inform...
The present status of cancer molecular imaging (MI) with nuclear medicine techniques is reviewed, hi...
The convergence of molecular and genetic disciplines with non-invasive imaging technologies has prov...
A promising role of cellular therapies in cancer treatment is reflected by the constantly growing nu...
The recent emergence of “molecular imaging ” as anintegrated discipline in academic medical centers ...