| Literature DB >> 34173838 |
Mike M Sathekge1,2, Frank Bruchertseifer3, Mariza Vorster4,5, Alfred Morgenstern3, Ismaheel O Lawal4,5.
Abstract
PURPOSE: This review discusses the current state of prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA)-based alpha therapy of metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). With this in-depth discussion on the growing field of PSMA-based alpha therapy (PAT), we aimed to increase the interactions between basic scientists and physician-scientists in order to advance the field.Entities:
Keywords: Actinium-225; Bismuth-213; PSMA; Prostate cancer; Targeted alpha therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34173838 PMCID: PMC8712297 DOI: 10.1007/s00259-021-05434-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging ISSN: 1619-7070 Impact factor: 9.236
Summary characteristics of alpha-emitting radionuclides suitable for targeted alpha therapy of prostate cancer
| Radionuclide | Half-life | Emitted particles | Total α energy emitted per decay (MeV) | Range in tissue (μm) | LET (keV/μm) | Preclinical/clinical |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 225Ac | 9.9 days | 4α, 2β− | 27.9 | 47–85 | 61–230 | Preclinical/Clinical |
| 213Bi | 45.6 min | 2α, 2β− | 8.5 | 40–100 | 65–230 | |
| 212Pb/212Bi | 10.6 h | 1α, 2β− | 7.9 | 40–100 | 61–230 | Preclinical |
| 149 Tb | 4.1 h | 1α,1ε/2ε, 1β+/2β+ | 0.7 | 25 | 140 | |
| 227Th | 18.7 days | 5α, 2β− | 32.8 | 50–70 | 71–230 | |
| 223Ra | 11.4 days | 4α, 2β− | 26.8 | 46–70 | 71–230 | |
| 211At | 7.2 h | 1α, 1ε | 6.9 | 55–80 | 71–230 |
Fig. 1Schematic representation of two hypothetical scenarios describing the fate of the recoiling daughter radionuclide that gets released from the chelating moiety of TAT-P in vivo. The upper section labelled “No TAT-P internalization” depicts a daughter radionuclide that is released into the blood stream while causing either unspecific local damage to healthy tissue or travels further with the blood stream and causes analogical damage distantly elsewhere. The lower section labelled “TAT-P internalization” depicts TAT-P that specifically internalizes into the targeted tumor cell. The daughter radionuclide is then released with a high probability inside the tumor cell or to a minor extent might escape the tumor cell and cause damage not only to the target tumor cell but, depending on the traveled distance, to other cells as well
Fig. 2A 67-year-old-male with extensive skeletal metastases, Gleason score = 4 + 5. He was treated with 225Ac-PSMA-617 following disease progression on conventional therapy. The bone marrow remained stable after treatment
Summary of clinical studies on PSMA-based targeted alpha therapy of prostate cancer
| Radioligand | First author, year of publication | Number of patients | % of patients with PSA decline of ≥ 50% (n/N) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 213Bi- PSMA-617 | Sathekge et al., 2017 [ | 1 | 100% (1/1) | Remarkable response of mCRPC to 2 cycles of 223Bi-PSMA-617 |
| Kratochwil et al., 2016 [ | 2 | 100% (2/2) | First evidence of safety and efficacy of 225Ac-PSMA-617 therapy in mCRPC | |
| Kratochwil et al., 2017 [ | 14 | 44% (4/9) | Dose-escalation study establishing salivary gland as the dose-limiting organ and 100 KBq as the maximum tolerable activity for 225Ac-PSMA therapy | |
| Kratochwil et al., 2018 [ | 40 | 63% (24/38) | 225Ac-PSMA-617 show longer duration of disease control than approved agents applied earlier in the treatment sequence of mCRPC | |
| Sathekge et al., 2019 [ | 1 | 100% (1/1) | Complete resolution of cerebral and skeletal metastases of mCRPC following 225Ac-PSMA-617 therapy | |
| De Medeiros et al., 2019 [ | 1 | 100% (1/1) | A patient with large volume metastases of mCRPC developed tumor lysis syndrome following treatment with 225Ac-PSMA-617 | |
| 225Ac-PSMA-617 | Sathekge et al., 2019 [ | 17 | 88% (15/17) | Remarkable and durable response of mCRPC to 225Ac-PSMA-617 in chemotherapy-naïve men |
| Sathekge et al., 2020 [ | 73 | 70% (51/73) | Largest series on the efficacy and safety of 225Ac-PSMA-617 in mCRPC. Shows prior 177Lu-PSMA therapy as a poor predictor of survival | |
| Yadav et al., 2020 [ | 28 | 39% (11/28) | Therapy of mCRPC with 225Ac-PSMA-617 was associated with an improvement in global health status of treated patients | |
| Feuerecker et al., 2020 [ | 26 | 65% (17/26) | Remarkable PSA response in heavily pretreated patients who had failed 177Lu-PSMA therapy Duration of PSA response was short No significant change in the global health status of the patients following treatment | |
| Khreish et al., 2020 [ | 20 | 65% (13/20) | 225Ac-PSMA-617/177Lu-PSMA-617 applied in tandem induced remarkable PSA response in patients with poor response to prior 177Lu-PSMA-617 monotherapy | |
| Satapathy et al., 2020 [ | 11 | 46% (5/11) | The improvement in patients’ quality of life following 225Ac-PSMA-617 therapy occurs mostly in the physical (improvement in pain, difficulty with micturition, fatigue, and physical activity) and emotional domains | |
| Van der Doelen et al., 2020 [ | 13 | 69% (9/13) | Also confirms improvement in quality of life following 225Ac-PSMA-617 therapy | |
| Rathke et al., 2020 [ | 1 | 100% (1/1) | Patient with history of mCRPC remained in remission 5 years after therapy with 225Ac-PSMA-617 | |
| Rosar et al., 2021 [ | 17 | 29% | Antitumor activity of a single course of 225Ac-PSMA-617/177Lu-PSMA-617 administered in tandem to patients whose disease progressed after 177Lu-PSMA-617 monotherapy Good concordance in response assessed by serum PSA and molecular metrics derived from 68 Ga-PSMA PET/CT | |
| Pelletier et al., 2021[ | 2 | NA | Two patients developed progressive renal failure following treatment with 225Ac-PSMA-617 therapy | |
| Maserumule et al., 2021 [ | 1 | 100% (1/1) | Complete remission of extensive bilateral pulmonary metastases of mCRPC induced by 225Ac-PSMA-617 therapy | |
| 225Ac-PSMA-I&T | Ilhan et al., 2020 [ | 1 | 100% (1/1) | A patient with mCRPC, treated with 10 cycles of 177Lu-PSMA-617. He developed resistance to 177Lu-PSMA-617 and was treated with 2 cycles of 225Ac-PSMA-I&T, to which he responded |
| Zacherl et al., 2020 [ | 14 | 50% (7/14) | First series reporting the efficacy of 225Ac-PSMA-617 in men with mCRPC |
Fig. 3A 69-year-old-male with extensive skeletal and soft tissue metastases of metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, Gleason score = 4 + 4. He was chemotherapy-naïve at the time of 225Ac-PSMA-617 therapy. He had a durable response to therapy