| Literature DB >> 33096754 |
Amelie Heesch1, Jochen Maurer2, Elmar Stickeler2, Mohsen Beheshti1,3, Felix M Mottaghy1,4, Agnieszka Morgenroth1.
Abstract
Molecular imaging plays an increasingly important role in the diagnosis and treatment of different malignancies. Radiolabeled probes enable the visualization of the primary tumor as well as the metastases and have been also employed in targeted therapy and theranostic approaches. With breast cancer being the most common malignancy in women worldwide it is of special interest to develop novel targeted treatments. However, tumor microenvironment and escape mechanisms often limit their therapeutic potential. Addressing tumor stroma associated targets provides a promising option to inhibit tumor growth and angiogenesis and to disrupt tumor tissue architecture. This review describes recent developments on radiolabeled probes used in diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer especially in triple negative type with the focus on potential targets offered by the tumor microenvironment, like tumor associated macrophages, cancer associated fibroblasts, and endothelial cells.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; molecular imaging; radiotracer; targeted treatment; tumor microenvironment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33096754 PMCID: PMC7590199 DOI: 10.3390/cells9102334
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Breast cancer microenvironment targets and their respective radiotracers addressing cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs), and endothelial cells (ECs) discussed in this review. The black boxes display the available targeting agents that are currently object of research. -I: inhibitor; -L: ligand.
Current radiotracers in preclinical or clinical applications in order of appearance. T.a. = therapeutic approach.
| Radiotracer | Target | Tumor Entity | Application | Development Phase | Reference | Potential for TNBC Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [18F]FES | ER | ER+ BCa | PET | Phase III | NCT01986569 | No |
| [18F]4FMFES | ER | ER+ BCa | PET | Phase II | [ | No |
| [18F]FENP | PR | PR+ BCa | PET | Failed | [ | No |
| [18F]FFNP | PR | PR+ BCa | PET | Phase II | NCT03212170 | No |
| [111In]In-trastuzumab | HER2/neu | HER2+ BCa | SPECT | Early Phase I | NCT01445054 | No |
| [89Zr]Zr-trastuzumab | HER2/neu | HER2+ BCa | PET | Early Phase I | NCT02065609 | No |
| [64Cu]Cu-DOTA-trastuzumab | HER2/neu | HER2+ BCa | PET | n.a. | NCT01093612 | No |
| [89Zr]Zr-pertuzumab | HER2/neu | HER2+ BCa | PET | Phase I | NCT03109977 | No |
| [68Ga]Ga-HER2-Nanobody | HER2/neu | HER2+ BCa | PET | Phase I | [ | No |
| [68Ga]Ga-ABY-025 | HER2/neu | HER2+ BCa | PET | Phase II | NCT01858116 | No |
| [18F]F-RL-I-5F7 | HER2/neu | HER2+ BCa | PET | Preclinical | [ | No |
| [18F]F-RL-I-2Rs15d | HER2/neu | HER2+ BCa | PET | Preclinical | [ | No |
| [131I]I-SGMIB-2Rs15 | HER2/neu | HER2+ BCa | SPECT (t.a.) | Preclinical | [ | No |
| [225Ac]Ac-DOTA-Nb | HER2/neu | HER2+ BCa | Ex vivo (t.a.) | Preclinical | [ | No |
| [111In]In-2Rs15d | HER2/neu | HER2+ BCa | SPECT | Preclinical | [ | No |
| [225Ac]Ac-2Rs15d | HER2/neu | HER2+ BCa | Ex vivo (t.a.) | Preclinical | [ | No |
| ZHER2:342-SR-HP1 + [177Lu]Lu- | HER2/neu | HER2+ BCa | SPECT (t.a.) | Preclinical | [ | No |
| [111In]In-2g10 | uPAR | uPAR+ BCa | SPECT | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [64Cu]Cu-NOTA-ALT-836-Fab | TF | TF+ BCa | PET | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [89Zr]Zr-DFO-CR011 | gpNMB | gpNMB+ BCa | PET | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [89Zr]Zr-M9346A | FRα | FRα+ BCa | PET | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [86Y]Y-NM600 | Lipid rafts | Lipid rafts+ BCa | PET | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [177Lu]Lu-NM600 | Lipid rafts | Lipid rafts+ BCa | T.a. | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [18F]FTT | PARP1 | PARP+ Cancer | PET | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [124I]I2-PARPi | PARP1 | PARP+ Cancer | PET | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [131I]I2-PARPi | PARP1 | PARP+ Cancer | SPECT | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [131I]I-MAPi | PARP1 | PARP+ Cancer | SPECT (t.a.) | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [125I]I-FAPI-01 | FAP (CAFs) | FAP+ Cancer | PET | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [177Lu]Lu-FAPI-02 | FAP (CAFs) | FAP+ Cancer | PET | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [68Ga]Ga-FAPI-02 | FAP (CAFs) | FAP+ Cancer | PET | Phase 0/I | [ | Yes |
| [68Ga]Ga-FAPI-04 | FAP (CAFs) | FAP+ Cancer | PET | Phase 0/I | [ | Yes |
| [90Y]Y-FAPI-04 | FAP (CAFs) | FAP+ Cancer | SPECT (t.a.) | Phase 0/I | [ | Yes |
| [99mTc]Tc-FL-L3 | FAP (CAFs) | FAP+ Cancer | PET | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [99mTc]Tc-tilmanocept | CD206 (TAMs) | CD206+ Cancer | SPECT | Approved | [ | Yes |
| [99mTc]Tc-SC | CD206 (TAMs) | CD206+ Cancer | SPECT | Phase III | NCT01668914 | Yes |
| [99mTc]Tc-α-MMR Nb | CD206 (TAMs) | CD206+ Cancer | SPECT | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [89Zr]Zr-AI-HDL | HDL (TAMs) | HDL+ Cancer | PET | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [89Zr]Zr-PL-HDL | HDL (TAMs) | HDL+ Cancer | PET | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [89Zr]Zr-bevacizumab | VEGF (ECs) | VEGF+ Cancer | PET | Early Phase I | NCT01894451 | Yes |
| ( | VEGFR-2 (ECs) | VEGFR-2+ Cancer | PET | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [64Cu]Cu-DOTA-VEGFDEE | VEGFR-2 (ECs) | VEGFR-2+ Cancer | PET | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [64Cu]Cu-DOTA-VEGF121 | VEGFR-2 (ECs) | VEGFR-2+ Cancer | PET | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [89Zr]Zr-scVR1 | VEGFR-1 (ECs) | VEGFR-1+ Cancer | PET | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [89Zr]Zr-scVR2 | VEGFR-2 (ECs) | VEGFR-2+ Cancer | PET | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [225Ac]Ac-PSMA | PSMA (ECs) | PSMA+ Cancer | T.a. | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [177Lu]Lu-PSMA | PSMA (ECs) | PSMA+ Cancer | T.a. | Phase 0/I | [ | Yes |
| [68Ga]Ga-PSMA-11 | PSMA (ECs) | PSMA+ Cancer | PET | Phase 0/I | [ | Yes |
| [177Lu]Lu-PSMA-617 | PSMA (ECs) | PSMA+ Cancer | T.a. | Preclinical | [ | Yes |
| [99mTc]Tc-NC100692 | Integrins (ECs) | αvβ3 integrin+ Cancer | SPECT | Phase 0/I | [ | Yes |
| [18F]F-Galacto-RGD | Integrins (ECs) | αvβ3 integrin+ Cancer | PET | Phase 0/I | [ | Yes |
Figure 2Schematic model of [177Lu]Lu-PSMA-617 internalization in endogenous radiotherapy. (1) Upon binding of [177Lu]Lu-PSMA-617 to PSMA (2) the complex is internalized into the tumor cell via clathrin-mediated endocytosis. (3) The tracer is transported throughout the cell via endosomes which (4) fuse with a lysosome. (5) PSMA is recycled back to the plasma membrane or undergoes lysosomal degradation. (6) The tracer is released or the ligand may diffuse to the extracellular space [55]. Since the β-rays of 177Lu have an average soft tissue range of 0.23 mm which surpasses the cell diameter, an internalization of [177Lu]Lu-PSMA-617 is not necessary for the cell toxicity. Importantly, this enables destroying of surrounding cancer cells which do not express the target (crossfire effect addressing tumor heterogeneity) [56].
Figure 3Microenvironment in breast cancer (BCa). The tumor microenvironment consists of numerous cell types like fibroblasts, myofibroblasts, mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), adipocytes, endothelial cells (ECs), and immune cells like T-cells, B-cells, natural killer (NK) cells, macrophages, tumor associated macrophages (TAMs), neutrophils, myeloid-derived suppressor cells, cancer stem cells (CSCs), and tumor cells. The base of all interactions forms the extracellular matrix (ECM).