| Literature DB >> 30543050 |
Silvano Gnesin1, Francesco Cicone2, Periklis Mitsakis2, Axel Van der Gucht2, Sébastien Baechler3, Raymond Miralbell4, Valentina Garibotto5, Thomas Zilli4, John O Prior2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gastrin-releasing peptide receptor antagonists have promise in theranostics of several highly incident tumours, including prostate and breast. This study presents the first human dosimetry of 68Ga-NODAGA-MJ9 in the first five consecutive patients with recurrent prostate cancer included in a dual-tracer positron emission tomography (PET) protocol. Five male patients with biochemical relapse of prostate adenocarcinoma underwent four whole-body time-of-flight PET/CT scans within 2 h after tracer injection. To be used as input in OLINDA/EXM 2.0, time-integrated activity coefficients were derived from manually drawn regions of interest over the following body regions: brain, thyroid, lungs, heart, liver, gallbladder, spleen, stomach, kidneys, adrenals, red marrow, pancreas, intestines, urinary bladder and whole body. Organ absorbed doses and effective dose (ED) were calculated with OLINDA/EXM 2.0 using the NURBS voxelized phantoms adjusted to the ICRP-89 organ masses and ICRP103 tissue-weighting factors. Additional absorbed dose estimations were performed with OLINDA/EXM 1.1 to be comparable with similar previous publications.Entities:
Keywords: 68Ga-NODAGA-MJ9; Biochemical relapse; Bombesin; Dosimetry; GRP antagonist; Gastrin-releasing peptide receptor; OLINDA/EXM; PET/CT; Prostate cancer; Theranostics
Year: 2018 PMID: 30543050 PMCID: PMC6291411 DOI: 10.1186/s13550-018-0462-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EJNMMI Res Impact factor: 3.138
Patient characteristics
| Patient | Age (years) | BMI (kg/m2) | Gleason score | PSA (ng/ml) | PSA doubling time (months) | 68Ga-MJ9 PET/CT findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 62 | 31.4 | 9 | 8.5 | 2 | Lymph nodes + bone metastases |
| 2a | 68 | 22.1 | 7 | 2.3 | 1 | Bone metastases |
| 3b | 67 | 27.5 | 6 | 3.4 | 18 | Bone metastases |
| 4b | 72 | 24.9 | 9 | 7.7 | 4.4 | Lymph-nodal metastases |
| 5 | 56 | 24.3 | 8 | 7.3 | 12 | Local relapse |
aHistory of pancreatic carcinoma treated with pancreaticoduodenectomy, and adjuvant chemo- and radiotherapy
bHistory of gallstones treated with cholecystectomy
Fig. 1Maximum intensity projections acquired 10, 45, 70 and 100 min after 68Ga-NODAGA-MJ9 injection (a–d, respectively) in a 56-year-old patient with biochemical relapse of prostate cancer (patient #5). The typical 68Ga-NODAGA-MJ9 biodistribution is observed, including visualisation of the urinary system, as well as fast and prominent uptake by the pancreas and the biliary tract
Fig. 268Ga-NODAGA-MJ9 normalised time-activity curves for most relevant abdominal organs. The organ activity was normalised to the patient administered activity. Coloured squares indicate patient-related data points. Blue dots indicate the normalised activity (mean ± SD) obtained at each time point. The coefficient of determination (R2) of the mono-exponential fit (except for the gallbladder, see methods) is reported for each organ. Due to previous surgery, gallbladder and pancreatic normalised time-activity curves were available for two and four patients only, respectively
Fig. 3Biological organ kinetic of 68Ga-NODAGA-MJ9 corrected for 68Ga physical decay. Colour bars represent the average percent of injected activity per gram of tissue (%IA/g) ± 1SD, for each time point
Residence times, organ-absorbed doses and ED according to OLINDA/EXM 2.0 for 30-min and 1-h urinary voiding cycles in men. Extrapolated organ-absorbed doses in female and reference person are reported for 1-h urinary voiding cycle only
| Target organ | Patient cohort ( | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Residence time (h) | Male | Male | Female | Reference | ||||
| 0.5 h voiding | 1 h voiding | 1 h voiding | 1 h voiding | |||||
| Mean | SD | Dose | SD | Dose | SD | Dose | Dose | |
| mGy/MBq | mGy/MBq | mGy/MBq | mGy/MBq | |||||
| Adrenals | 2.48E-04 | 8.49E-05 | 1.48E-02 | 2.22E-03 | 1.46E-02 | 2.13E-03 | 1.57E-02 | 1.52E-02 |
| Brain | 1.53E-03 | 1.05E-03 | 1.71E-03 | 3.12E-04 | 1.71E-03 | 3.20E-04 | 3.62E-03 | 2.68E-03 |
| Breast | – | – | – | – | – | – | 1.06E-02 | 1.06E-02 |
| Esophagus | – | – | 1.06E-02 | 5.47E-04 | 1.06E-02 | 5.22E-04 | 1.25E-02 | 1.16E-02 |
| Eyes | – | – | 8.39E-03 | 4.70E-04 | 8.39E-03 | 4.56E-04 | 1.02E-02 | 9.32E-03 |
| Gallbladder walla | 3.60E-03 | 1.27E-03 | 2.69E-02 | 5.59E-03 | 2.69E-02 | 5.66E-03 | 2.19E-02 | 1.99E-02 |
| Left colon | 6.73E-03 | 3.33E-03 | 3.37E-02 | 9.04E-03 | 3.38E-02 | 9.01E-03 | 3.27E-02 | 3.08E-02 |
| Small Intestinea | 4.01E-02 | 1.71E-02 | 3.88E-02 | 1.05E-02 | 3.90E-02 | 1.04E-02 | 4.04E-02 | 3.76E-02 |
| Stomach walla | 4.79E-03 | 2.45E-03 | 1.92E-02 | 1.53E-03 | 1.92E-02 | 1.53E-03 | 2.00E-02 | 1.91E-02 |
| Right colon | 1.35E-02 | 6.66E-03 | 3.21E-02 | 1.01E-02 | 3.22E-02 | 1.01E-02 | 3.28E-02 | 3.00E-02 |
| Rectum | 6.73E-03 | 3.33E-03 | 3.18E-02 | 1.02E-02 | 3.25E-02 | 9.84E-03 | 3.58E-02 | 3.17E-02 |
| Heart walla | 2.16E-02 | 5.45E-03 | 2.13E-02 | 2.26E-03 | 2.13E-02 | 2.26E-03 | 2.70E-02 | 2.42E-02 |
| Kidneys | 2.14E-02 | 2.23E-03 | 3.48E-02 | 3.04E-03 | 3.48E-02 | 3.03E-03 | 3.31E-02 | 3.40E-02 |
| Liver | 3.79E-02 | 2.93E-03 | 1.41E-02 | 8.41E-04 | 1.41E-02 | 8.41E-04 | 1.85E-02 | 1.63E-02 |
| Lungs | 2.88E-02 | 5.98E-03 | 1.34E-02 | 1.95E-03 | 1.34E-02 | 1.95E-03 | 1.66E-02 | 1.50E-02 |
| Ovaries | – | – | – | – | – | – | 1.50E-02 | 1.49E-02 |
| Pancreas | 8.13E-02 | 1.95E-02 | 2.60E-01 | 6.14E-02 | 2.60E-01 | 6.14E-02 | 2.43E-01 | – |
| Prostate | – | – | 1.22E-02 | 5.52E-04 | 1.33E-02 | 7.91E-04 | – | 1.33E-02 |
| Salivary glands | – | – | 9.12E-03 | 5.06E-04 | 9.12E-03 | 4.93E-04 | 1.07E-02 | 9.93E-03 |
| Red marrow | 7.10E-03 | 8.59E-04 | 9.38E-03 | 4.18E-04 | 9.49E-03 | 4.06E-04 | 1.17E-02 | 1.17E-02 |
| Osteogenic cells | – | – | 6.83E-03 | 3.23E-04 | 6.89E-03 | 3.21E-04 | 7.71E-03 | 7.87E-03 |
| Spleen | 3.16E-03 | 6.73E-04 | 1.37E-02 | 1.58E-03 | 1.37E-02 | 1.58E-03 | 1.55E-02 | 1.46E-02 |
| Testes | – | – | 9.56E-03 | 5.28E-04 | 9.82E-03 | 5.59E-04 | – | 9.82E-03 |
| Thymus | – | – | 1.02E-02 | 3.99E-04 | 1.02E-02 | 3.60E-04 | 1.29E-02 | 1.15E-02 |
| Thyroid | 3.20E-04 | 5.00E-05 | 9.32E-03 | 8.30E-04 | 9.15E-03 | 8.21E-04 | 1.05E-02 | 9.85E-03 |
| Urinary bladder walla | 8.77E-02 | 1.69E-02 | 6.98E-02 | 1.26E-02 | 1.12E-01 | 1.97E-02 | 1.39E-01 | 1.25E-01 |
| Uterus | – | – | – | – | – | – | 1.78E-02 | 1.76E-02 |
| Total body | – | – | 1.14E-02 | 5.24E-04 | 1.17E-02 | 5.87E-04 | 1.43E-02 | 1.30E-02 |
| ED ICRP 103 (mSv/MBq) | – | – | 1.76E-02 | 1.07E-03 | 1.88E-02 | 1.16E-03 | 2.30E-02 | 2.17E-02 |
aIrradiation from the organ content is accounted for residence time calculation
Fig. 4Dosimetry comparison between our study and those of Roivainen et al. [30] and Zhang et al. [34] based on OLINDA/EXM 1.0. The absorbed dose estimations reported in this figure are based on either a 3.5-h urinary voiding cycle (our study and that of Roivainen et al. [30]) or on a 1-h voiding cycle (Zhang et al. [34]). It should be noted that, for the organs reported, variations of urinary voiding cycle do not produce significant changes of absorbed dose estimations. Error bars represent ± 2SD