| Literature DB >> 31316916 |
Charles A Kunos1, Jacek Capala2, Susan Percy Ivy1.
Abstract
Targeted radiopharmaceutical conjugates intended for therapeutic use often are made of three key components, a decaying radionuclide, a chemical chelator/linker, and a targeted molecular entity. The National Cancer Institute (NCI) Experimental Therapeutics Program has accepted four radiopharmaceutical drug products so far that fit the targeted radiopharmaceutical conjugate class. As the NCI sharpens its thinking about its role as an investigational new drug sponsor for radiopharmaceuticals in clinical development, it has considered the relative merits of modular radiopharmaceutical drug master files. Here, the NCI provides its perspective on modular radiopharmaceutical drug master files as it initiates a clinical development program for such agents and further organizes its radiopharmaceutical Small Business Innovation Research portfolio.Entities:
Keywords: National Cancer Institute (NCI); cancer; drug master file; radiopharmaceutical; targeted radiation therapy; targeted radioisotope therapy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31316916 PMCID: PMC6611355 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2019.00573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Radiopharmaceutical classification. Charted are key radiobiological aspects of radiopharmaceuticals of the (A) neat class (i.e., no targeting ligand) or (B) conjugated class [i.e., has targeting ligand (protein or antibody)]. (A) A neat radiopharmaceutical might act as a mineral mimetic [such as calcium in the case of radium-223 (green radionuclide)], home in on areas of tumor-related bone turnover in affected bones, incorporate and lock into mineralized bone matrix, and lethally irradiate nearby tumor cells for tumor control, as well as, osteoclasts and osteoblasts so as to mitigate abnormal tumor-related bone formation. (B) A conjugated radiopharmaceutical with a targeting ligand [like thorium-227 antibody conjugates (purple radionuclide)] might bind to cancer cell surface molecules, internalize as part of endosomes, and lethally irradiate nuclear DNA from within the cancer cell.
Figure 2Strategy for modular radiopharmaceutical drug master files. Depicted are NCI's thoughts on a conceptual strategy for modular radiopharmaceutical drug master files (DMFs). This illustration describes a radiopharmaceutical from the conjugate class. Here, the new molecular entity is made up of three components—a radionuclide, a chemical chelator or linker, and a targeting ligand (such as the depicted antibody). Each component might have its own individual DMF that details its individual chemistry, manufacturing, and controls. By cross-reference, a modular radiopharmaceutical DMF might detail the new molecular entity's chemistry, manufacturing, and controls without duplicating forms, filings, and effort. In concept, this approach speeds clinical development of a radiopharmaceutical that might be considered a new molecular entity by regulatory agencies.