| Literature DB >> 33995659 |
Jordan M White1,2, Freddy E Escorcia3, Nerissa T Viola2.
Abstract
Radioimmunotherapy (RIT) is FDA-approved for the clinical management of liquid malignancies, however, its use for solid malignancies remains a challenge. The putative benefit of RIT lies in selective targeting of antigens expressed on the tumor surface using monoclonal antibodies, to systemically deliver cytotoxic radionuclides. The past several decades yielded dramatic improvements in the quality, quantity, recent commercial availability of alpha-, beta- and Auger Electron-emitting therapeutic radiometals. Investigators have created new or improved existing bifunctional chelators. These bifunctional chelators bind radiometals and can be coupled to antigen-specific antibodies. In this review, we discuss approaches to develop radiometal-based RITs, including the selection of radiometals, chelators and antibody platforms (i.e. full-length, F(ab')2, Fab, minibodies, diabodies, scFv-Fc and nanobodies). We cite examples of the performance of RIT in the clinic, describe challenges to its implementation, and offer insights to address gaps toward translation. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: cancer; oncology; radioimmunotherapy; radiopharmaceuticals; targeted radiotherapy; theranostics
Year: 2021 PMID: 33995659 PMCID: PMC8120204 DOI: 10.7150/thno.57177
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theranostics ISSN: 1838-7640 Impact factor: 11.556
Radiometals for therapy with their half-life (t1/2), decay characteristics, path length in tissue and reported chelators
| Radiometal | t1/2 | Decay Properties (MeV) | Path Length | Reported Chelator(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 223Ra | 11.4 d | 5.8-7.53 (α) | 46-68 μm | H2macropa |
| 225Ac | 9.9 d | 5.8-8.4 (α) | 47-85 μm†
| DOTA, H2macropa, Crown |
| 227Th | 18.7 d | 6.14 (α) | ‡ | DOTA, Me-3,2-HOPO |
| 212Pb* | 10.6 h | 6.05 (α)** | DOTA, TCMC | |
| 212Bi | 60.6 min | 6.05 (α, 36%) | 51-92 μm | 3p-C-DEPA, NETA, DOTA, CHX-A”-DTPA |
| 213Bi | 45.6 min | 5.87 (α, 2.2%) | 48-85 μm | 3p-C-DEPA, NETA, DOTA, CHX-A”-DTPA |
| 177Lu | 6.7 d | 0.497 (β-) | 1.8 mm | DOTA, NETA, CHX-A”-DTPA |
| 90Y | 2.7 d | 2.28 (β-) | 11.3 mm | DOTA, NETA, CHX-A”-DTPA, DTPA |
| 67Cu | 2.6 d | 0.395 (β-) | 2.1 mm | DOTA, NOTA |
| 188Re | 17 h | 2.12 (β-) | 10.4 mm | Direct, MAG2-GABA, Trisuccin |
| 64Cu | 12.7 h | 0.573 (β-, 38.4%) | 0.95-1.4 mm | TETA, DOTA, NOTA; |
| 67Ga | 3.26 d | 6.3 (AE) | 0.002-2.1 μm | DFO, NOTA, DOTA, PCTA, |
| 111In | 2.8 d | 6.8 (AE) | 2-500 nm | DOTA, CHX-A”-DTPA, H4octapa, NOTA, DTPA |
| 64Cu | 12.7 h | 2 (AE, 41%) | 126 nm | TETA, DOTA, NOTA; |
ˆ 223Ra yields four high-energy α-particles per disintegration.
ˆˆ 225Ac yields four α-particles per disintegration with energies ranging from 5.8 to 8.4 MeV. Three α-particles are emitted to decay to 213Bi, then one alpha particle is emitted from the two routes of decay to 209Bi.
†The range of α-emissions is defined by the α-emitting daughter isotopes of 225Ac.
‡227Th does not have a defined range of α-emissions due to successive α-emitting daughter isotopes.29
*212Pb is a β- emitter but produces the daughter isotope 212Bi and is often used for targeted α therapy due to the short half-life of 212Bi.
** α energy emitted by 212Bi.
Abbreviations: DOTA, 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetic acid; H2macropa, N,N'-bis[(6-carboxy-2-pyridil)methyl]-4,13-diaza-18-crown-6; Crown, 2,2',2'',2'''-(1,10-dioxa-4,7,13,16-tetraazacyclooctadecane-4,7,13,16-tetrayl)tetraacetic acid;Me-3,2-HOPO, 3-hydroxy-N-methyl-2-pyridinone; TCMC, 1,4,7,10-tetraza-1,4,7,10-tetra(2-carbamoylmethyl)cyclododecane; 3p-C-DEPA, 2-[(carboxymethyl)][5-(4-nitrophenyl-1-[4,7,10-tris(carboxymethyl)-1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecan-1-yl]pentan-2-yl)amino]acetic acid; NETA, ({4-[2-(Bis-carboxymethyl-amino_ethyl]-7-carboxymethyl-[1,4,7]triazonan-1-yl}; DTPA, diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid; CHX-A”-DTPA, cyclohexane-1,2-diamine-pentaacetic acid; TETA, 1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradecane-1,4,8,11-tetraacetic acid; NOTA, 1,4,7-triazacyclononane-1,4,7-triacetic acid; MAG2-GABA, S-ethoxyethyl mercapto-acetylglycylglycyl aminobutyrate; Trisuccin, N-[tris[2-[(N-hydroxyamino)carbonyl]ethyl]methyl]succinamic acid; p-SCN-Bn-Oxo-DO3A, 1-Oxa-4,7,10-triazacyclododecane-5-S-(4-isothiocyanatobenzyl)-4,7,10-triacetic acid; p-SCN-Bn-Oxo-PCTA, 3,6,9,15-tetraazabicyclo[9.3.1] pentadeca-1(15),11,13-triene-4-S-(4-isothiocyanatobenzyl)-3,6,9-triacetic acid; HBED, N,N'-bis (2-hydroxybenzyl) ethylenediamine-N,N'-diacetic acid; DFO, desferrioxamine; H4octapa, N,N'-bi(6-carboxy-2-pyridylmethyl)ethylenediamine-N,N'-diacetic acid).
Figure 1Therapeutic radiometals possess unique decay characteristics resulting in varying energies and ranges in the target tissue referred to as linear energy transfer (LET). A. α-particle emitters have the highest LET produced by high MeV level energies and intermediate path lengths (μm). B. β-emitters have intermediate energies (keV-MeV) coupled with a long path length (mm) that produce low LET radiation that can traverse ~50 cell diameters. C. AE emitters have intermediate LET produced by low energies (1 eV - 1 keV) and distances typically <1μm. D: The potential range of the radiation type is depicted in a tumor tissue (β - yellow, α - green, AE - orange). Additionally, radiometal therapeutics have been described to induce toxicity not only in the cell expressing the target antigen (self-irradiation) but also to nontargeted nearby cells by crossfire irradiation. Instances in which cells have not been irradiated but exhibit characteristics similar to irradiated cells are described as a bystander effect.
Figure 2Common chelators for RIT radioisotopes. A. DTPA can form an octadentate coordination with three tertiary amine nitrogen donors and five oxygen donors from the carboxylic acid arms. B. DOTA chelates metals with four tertiary amine nitrogen donors and four oxygens from carboxylic acid, forming an octacoordinate metal complex. C. Macropa is an 18-membered macrocyclic ligand that has shown success for stable chelation of 225Ac and 227Th. D. CHX-A”-DTPA is a derivative of DTPA. E. TCMC is a derivative of DOTA with four primary amide pendant arms for stable chelation of 212Pb. F. TETA is a selective chelator of 64/67Cu. G. NOTA, and its derivative H. NETA is a hexadentate chelator that was utilized for radioisotopes such as 67Ga and 90Y, respectively.
Comparison of radiometal RIT mAb formats developed for targeting EGFR
| mAb | mAb Format | Radionuclide | Chelator | Dose Administered* | Study Highlights | Cancer cell line/xenograft |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Panitumumab | Full-length | 212Pb | TCMC | 0.37-1.48 MBq | MS for 0.37 MBq and 0.74 MBq cohorts were 39 d and 58 d compared to 15 d for control untreated mice. | LS-174T i.p. xenografts |
| 177Lu | DOTA-AuNP† | 1.5-4.5 MBq | A dose dependent decrease in | MDA-MB-468 and MDA-MB-231 | ||
| DOTA | 14.8 MBq | Tumor growth was inhibited up to 36 d p.i. compared to PBS and non-labeled control; no significant adverse events for body weight nor mortality noted. | UM-SCC-22B | |||
| DOTA-MCP‡ | 6 MBq | A 6 MBq dosed activity in non-tumor bearing mice did not cause significant decreases in RBC, WBC or platelets, no increase in serum ALT and only a small increase in Cr. [177Lu]Lu-MCP-panitumumab administered mice exhibited significantly decreased tumor volumes at 33 d p.i. compared to control. | PANC-1 | |||
| F(ab)'2 | 212Pb | TCMC | 0.37-3.7 MBq i.p. | 1.11 MBq (i.p.) and 0.74 MBq (i.v.) were selected as effective therapeutic doses with MS of 289 d and 46 d, respectively. Although benefit of i.p. was noted, i.v. administration was chosen for co-administration with gemcitabine (MS: 208 d) or paclitaxel (MS: 239 d). | LS-174T i.p. | |
| 64Cu | NOTA | 1.85-9.25 MBq | 3.7 MBq administered every two weeks was selected. No generalized toxicity of the tracer was noted. | OCIP23 pancreatic PDX and PANC-1 | ||
| Cetuximab | Full-length | 177Lu | DOTA | 14.8 MBq | A significant tumor growth delay was observed up to 30 d p.i., but tumors grew significantly larger (>1500 mm3 35 d p.i.) compared to [177Lu]Lu-DOTA-panitumumab; no significant adverse events for body weight nor mortality noted. | UM-SCC-22B |
| PCTA | 12.95 MBq | A significant difference in tumor volume 16 d p.i. was observed compared to saline or non-labeled cetuximab controls. | TE-8 | |||
| 12.95 MBq | A 55% reduction in tumor volume after treatment was observed. There was a significant decrease in final tumor volume 30 d p.i. compared to saline and non-labeled cetuximab controls. | SNU-1066 | ||||
| 188Re | N/A | 22.2-59.2 MBq | MTD was determined to be 37 MBq. Treatment studies were conducted with 29.6 and 22.2 MBq with MS of 62.5 and 61.75 d (control MS: 36.75 d). | NCI-H292 | ||
| 64Cu | PCTA | 11.1-74 MBq | MTD: 22.2 MBq. Survival of mice was at 40% when treated with adjuvant [64Cu]Cu-PCTA-cetuximab at 83 d with no detectable lesions. | x-PA-1-DC orthotopic xenograft | ||
| 212Pb | TCMB | 0.37-1.48 MBq | 0.37 MBq was chosen as the effective therapeutic dose due to lack of toxicity and a MS that lasted beyond 294 d. | LS-174T i.p. xenografts | ||
| F(ab)'2 | 177Lu | DOTAGA | 2-8 MBq | Colorectal tumor growth was inhibited for mice administered 4 and 8 MBq compared to 2 MBq and control. Acute weight loss was observed at the 4 MBq dose 20 d p.i. and mice recovered by 23 d p.i. | A431 |
†AuNP: Gold nanoparticles used for radiosensitization;
‡MCP: Metal chelating polymers;
*All activities administered i.v. unless otherwise noted.
Abbreviations: TCMC, 1,4,7,10-tetraza-1,4,7,10-tetra(2-carbamoylmethyl)cyclododecane; MS, median survival; RBC, red blood cells; WBC, white blood cells; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; Cr, creatinine; MTD, maximum tolerated dose; PCTA, 3,6,9,15-tetraazabicyclo[9.3.1]pentadeca-1(15),11,13-triene-3,6,9-triacetic acid.
Innate characteristics of common antibody platforms used in radiopharmaceutical development categorized as either engineered or enzymatically produced
| Enzymatic | Engineered | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Format | Intact | F(ab')2 | Fab | scFv-Fc | Minibody | Diabody | scFv | Nanobody |
| MW (kDa) | 150 | 110 | 55 | 105 | 80 | 55 | 28 | 12-15 |
| Valency | Divalent | Bivalent | Monovalent | Bivalent | Bivalent | Bivalent | Monovalent | Monovalent |
| Serum Half-life | 1-3 weeks | 8-10 h | 12-20 h | 8-80 h | 5-10 h | 5-6 h | 2-4 h | 0.5-1 h |
| Clearance Route | Liver | Liver, Kidney | Kidney | Liver | Liver | Kidney | Kidney | Kidney |
Comparison of radiometal RIT mAb formats developed for HER2 and CEA
| mAb Format | mAb | Radionuclide | Chelator | Dose Administered | Study Highlights | Cancer cell line/xenograft |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full-mAb | Trastuzumab | 90Y | IB4M-DTPA | 1.48-2.96 MBq | Variations in RIT dose and combined therapy with taxol. Tumor regression was observed over 35 d post treatment compared to controls. No toxicity studies were examined. | MCF-7 |
| 177Lu | SPIONs | 0.1 MBq | Highest uptake was observed in the liver and spleen. Neither toxicity studies, nor therapeutic efficacy for tumors were examined. | SKOV-3 | ||
| DOTA | 11.1-55.5 MBq | Single and fractionated cycles were examined at various activities for small (palpable-30 mm3) and medium (100-400 mm3) tumors. Complete response was observed in the fractionated triple cycle of 55.5 MBq in medium sized tumors. | BT474‡
| |||
| 213Bi | CHX-A”-DTPA | 1.85 MBq | MS of [213Bi]Bi-CHX-A”-DTPA-trastuzumab combined with carboplatin 24 h post RIT (87 d) was longer than control (17 d). A combination of [213Bi]Bi-CHX-A”-DTPA-trastuzumab with three doses of carboplatin starting 24 h post RIT increased MS two-fold (186 d) compared to control (23 d). | LS-174T i.p. | ||
| 212Pb | TCMC | 0.37 MBq | No significant difference in MS (based on timing of carboplatin). | LS-174T i.p. | ||
| 0.37-1.48 MBq | Comparison of internalizing 212Pb-labeled trastuzumab to non-internalizing [212Pb]Pb-TCMC-35A7. The MS for [212Pb]Pb-TCMC-trastuzumab was not reached after 130 d. A final absorbed dose of 27.6 Gy was observed. | A431 i.p. xenografts | ||||
| 227Th | DOTA | 0.2-0.6 MBq/kg | Significant increase in MS for 0.4 MBq/kg (63 ± 3 d) and 0.6 MBq/kg (96 ± 3 d) compared to saline control (42 ± 13 d). | SKBR-3 | ||
| Fab | Bispecific Trastuzumab | 111In/177Lu | DTPA/DOTA | 3.7-18.5 MBq | RBCs, Hb and HCT were significantly lower for mice receiving 18.5 MBq, with no significant difference for serum ALT and Cr at any dose; 11.1 MBq chosen for RIT studies. Tumor growth was inhibited 1.6-fold. | SKOV-3; |
| Diabody | C6.5K-A | 90Y | CHX-A”-DTPA | 1.85-18.5 MBq | 7.4 MBq for MDA-361/DYT2 and 11.1 MBq for SKOV-3 exhibited a nine- and three-day delay in doubling time. | SKOV-3; MDA-361/DYT2 |
| Nanobody | 2Rs15d | 177Lu | 20 MBq | Expected toxicity is noted for the kidney (195 %IA/g). No other observations on tumor response or toxicity studies noted. | LS174-T; SKOV-3; | |
| DTPA | 21.5 MBq | 7/8 mice reached event free survival up to 125 d p.i. All controls euthanized by 85 d p.i. | SKOV-3 | |||
| 225Ac | DOTA | 0.0293 MBq | Co-administration with Gelofusin significantly decreased renal accumulation by three-fold. Therapeutic efficacy and tumor growth inhibition were not examined. | SKOV-3; | ||
| 0.0659 MBq | MS SKOV-3.IP1: 225Ac]Ac-2Rs15d + trastuzumab: 29.5 d; [225Ac]Ac-2Rs15d: 23 d; Trastuzumab: 19 d; Control: 17 d. | Intracranial tumors of SKOV-3.IP1 & MDA-MB-231Br | ||||
| Full-mAb | cT84.66 | 90Y | DOTA | 0.74-3.7 MBq | Variation of [90Y]Y-DOTA-cT84.66 alone or in combination with taxol or cold trastuzumab, | MCF-7 |
| 35A7 | 177Lu | DOTA-Tz | 40 MBq/250 μL | Pretargeted RIT assessment of various Tz-PEGn linkers to optimize tumor uptake and clearance profiles. | Orthotopic peritoneal carcinomatosis | |
| 212Pb | TCMC | 0.37-1.48 MBq | Comparison of internalizing 212Pb-labeled trastuzumab to non-internalizing [212Pb]Pb-TCMC-35A7. A MS = 94 d for [212Pb]Pb-TCMC-35A7 was observed with a final absorbed dose of 35.5 Gy. | A431 i.p. xenografts |
‡ An IgG-scFv bispecific format was utilized with the IgG sequence of Trastuzumab.
Abbreviations: IB4M, 2-(p-isothiocyanatobenzyl)-6-methyl-diethylenetriamine-N,N,N´,N´´,N´´-pentaacetic acid; SPIONs, Super Paramagnetic Iron Oxide Nanoparticles; MS, Median Survival; RBC, red blood cells; Hb, hemoglobin; HCT, hematocrit; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; Cr, creatinine; %IA/g, percent injected activity per gram.
Figure 3Left Panel: Schematic of Biotin-Bevacizumab injection followed by an avidin chase. Middle Panel: [111In]In-DTPA-Bv and [111In]In-DTPA-Bt-Bv were utilized to examine the biodistribution profiles of the tracer 27 h post injection. [111In]In-DTPA-Bt-Bv exhibited significantly lower blood uptake and higher liver uptake. Left Panel: In the therapeutic study, the [90Y]Y-DTPA-Bt-Bv cohort of mice was significantly inhibited compared to the [90Y]Y-DTPA-Bv. Adapted with permission from Yudistiro et al., Molecular Pharmaceutics, 2018. Copyright 2018 American Chemical Society.
Figure 4High MET-expressing BxPC3 and low MET-expressing MIA PaCa 2 tumors were treated with a fractionation schedule 9.25 MBq/20 µg of [177Lu]Lu-DTPA-Onartuzumab. The fractionated schedule showed therapeutic efficacy for both high and low MET expressing tumors compared to saline and non-labeled onartuzumab controls. Adapted with permission from Escorcia et al., Theranostics, made available under a Creative Commons CC-BY license.
Figure 5(A) ImmunoPET and (B) Cerenkov luminescence imaging of mice injected with 86Y-labeled and 90Y-labeled ALT836, respectively. The high uptake of tracer in the tumor visualized by immunoPET is recapitulated with high uptake of the RIT observed by Cherenkov luminescence imaging. Adapted with permission from Ferreira, C.A., et al. 86/90Y-Labeled Monoclonal Antibody Targeting Tissue Factor for Pancreatic Cancer Theranostics. Mol. Pharm. 2020, 17 (5), 1697-1705. Copyright 2020 American Chemical Society.
Figure 6Waterfall plot demonstrating PSA response of patients treated with varying doses of [177Lu]Lu-J591. Gray: 20-35 mCi/m2 × 2, Blue: 40 mCi/m2 × 2, Red: 45 mCi/m2 × 2. As the doses increased, the PSA response decreased. Adapted with permission from Nanus et al. Phase 1/2 study fractionated dose lutetium-177-labeled anti-prostate-specific membrane antigen monoclonal antibody J591 (177Lu-J591) for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. Cancer. 2019, 125 (15), 2561-2569.