| Literature DB >> 34335972 |
Julie Bolcaen1, Janke Kleynhans2,3, Shankari Nair1, Jeroen Verhoeven4, Ingeborg Goethals5, Mike Sathekge2,3, Charlot Vandevoorde1, Thomas Ebenhan2,6.
Abstract
Despite numerous clinical trials and pre-clinical developments, the treatment of glioblastoma (GB) remains a challenge. The current survival rate of GB averages one year, even with an optimal standard of care. However, the future promises efficient patient-tailored treatments, including targeted radionuclide therapy (TRT). Advances in radiopharmaceutical development have unlocked the possibility to assess disease at the molecular level allowing individual diagnosis. This leads to the possibility of choosing a tailored, targeted approach for therapeutic modalities. Therapeutic modalities based on radiopharmaceuticals are an exciting development with great potential to promote a personalised approach to medicine. However, an effective targeted radionuclide therapy (TRT) for the treatment of GB entails caveats and requisites. This review provides an overview of existing nuclear imaging and TRT strategies for GB. A critical discussion of the optimal characteristics for new GB targeting therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals and clinical indications are provided. Considerations for target selection are discussed, i.e. specific presence of the target, expression level and pharmacological access to the target, with particular attention to blood-brain barrier crossing. An overview of the most promising radionuclides is given along with a validation of the relevant radiopharmaceuticals and theranostic agents (based on small molecules, peptides and monoclonal antibodies). Moreover, toxicity issues and safety pharmacology aspects will be presented, both in general and for the brain in particular. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: PET SPECT imaging; glioblastoma; radiochemistry; targeted radionuclide therapy; theranostics
Year: 2021 PMID: 34335972 PMCID: PMC8315062 DOI: 10.7150/thno.56639
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theranostics ISSN: 1838-7640 Impact factor: 11.556
Investigational PET/SPECT imaging in neuro-oncology
| Biological target | Radiopharmaceuticals($) | Vector(ǂ) | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amino acid metabolism | C | [18F]F-ACBC | AA | |
| P | [18F]F-ELP | AA | ||
| Angiogenesis (Integrin receptor family) | C | [18F]F-/ [68Ga]Ga-PRGD2 | Pep | |
| P | [64Cu]Cu-PEG4-c(RGDyK) | Pep | ||
| Angiogenesis (Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor) | C | [123I]iodo-VEGF-165 | Prot | |
| P | [111In]In-ZVEGFR2-Bp2 | Abf | ||
| Epidermal growth factor receptor | C | [11C]-CPD153035 | SM | |
| P | [124I]/ [131I]iodo-IPQA | SM | ||
| Chemokine receptor 4 | C | [68Ga]Ga-pentixafor | Pep | |
| P | [11C]methyl-AMD3465 | SM | ||
| Ephrin receptors | C | [89Zr]Zr-ifabotuzumab | Ab | |
| P | [64Cu]Cu-IIIA4 | Ab | ||
| Hypoxia | C | [18F]F-DiFA | SM | |
| P | [18F]F-RP170 | SM | ||
| Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase | C | [18F]F-TT | SM | |
| P | [18F]F-/[123I]iodo-olaparib | SM | ||
| Glutamate Carboxypeptidase 2 | C | [89Zr]Zr-IAB2M | Abf | |
| P | [18F]F-DCFPyL | Pep | ||
| Translocator protein (neuronal type) ($$) | C | [11C]-PK11195 | SM | |
| P | [18F]F-14 (£) | SM | ||
| Matrix-metalloproteinases | C | [131I]iodo-TM-601 | SM | |
| P | [89Zr]Zr-LEM2/5 | Ab | ||
| Fibroblast activation protein | C | [68Ga]Ga-FAPI | SM | |
| P | [18F]F-SiFa(Glc)FAPI | SM | ||
| Lipid metabolism(++) | C | [11C]-/ [18F]F-(ethyl)choline | SM | |
| P | [18F]-FPIA(*) | SM | ||
| Fibronectin (neuronal) | C | [123I]iodo-L19(scFv)2 | Abf | |
| P | [18F]F-iCREKA | Pep | ||
| Apoptosis | C | [18F]F-ML10 | SM | |
| Sigma receptor | C | [18F]F-fluspidine (*) | SM | |
| Somatostatin receptor 2 | C | [68Ga]Ga-/ [111In]In-octreotide | Pep | |
| Deoxycytidine Kinase | C | [18F]F-clofarabine | SM | |
| Neurokinin 1 receptor | C | [68Ga]Ga-Substance-P | Pep | |
| Copper Transporter 1 | P | [64Cu]Cu-(gold)nanocluster(+) | (**) | |
| Carbonic Anhydrase IX | P | [18F]F-VM4-037 | SM | |
| Tenascin-C | P | [99mTc]Tc-TTA1 | ON | |
| Histone deacetylases | P | [18F]TFAHA | SM | |
| Isocitrate Dehydrogenase 1 | P | [18F]-triazine-diamine | SM | |
| Iron transport | P | [67Ga]/ [68Ga]Ga-citrate | SM | |
| Glutathione transferase | P | [18F]F-BuEA-GS | SM | |
| Hepatocyte growth factor receptor | P | [89Zr]Zr-/ [76Br]Br-onartuzumab | Ab | |
| Mammalian target of rapamycin | P | [89Zr]Zr-transferrin | Prot | |
| Tyrosine kinases | P | [18F]F-dasatinib | SM | |
| Myeloid cells | P | [89Zr]Zr-anti-CD11b | Ab | |
| Platelet-derived growth factor receptor | P | [68Ga]Ga-/ [111In]In-ZO9591 | Abf | |
| Stem cells | P | [64Cu]Cu-AC133 | Ab |
($) radiopharmaceutical are grouped as in preclinical (P) and clinical (C) stages of development; chelating agents for radiometal complexation were not denoted in the names to improve clarity of presentation; (++) Fatty acid synthesis (acetate) and choline metabolism for choline; pivalic acid undergoes intracellular metabolism via the fatty acid oxidation pathway (an berrant lipid metabolite detection), (£) no trivial name available- UPAC: 7-chloro-N,N,5-trimethyl-4-oxo-3(6-[18F]fluoropyridin-2-yl)-3,5-dihydro-4H-pyridazino[4,5-b]indole-1-acetamide, (##) no names given - a small library of nonradioactive analogs were designed and synthesized based on the chemical structure of reported butyl-phenyl sulfonamide enzyme inhibitors, (*) currently in clinical translation, (ç) DNA-based oligonucleotide (aptamer), (°) RNA based oligonucleotide (aptamer), (**) protein-mimic cluster, (+) dual-imaging modality - investigatory (proof-of-concept), ($$) expressed on glioma-associated macrophages and microglia, ( ǂ ) vectors: amino-acid (AA), antibody (Ab), antibody fragment (Abf), small biomolecule (SM), peptide (Pep), protein (Prot), oligonucleotide (ON).
Physical properties and pro/cons of therapeutic radionuclides studied for glioblastoma therapy
| Isotope | Range | T ½ (h) | Paired Isotope | Pro's for GB TRT | Cons for GB TRT | Studies in GB | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.04-0.10 | 238.10 | • | • Relatively long T ½ + multiple alpha particles generated (rapid decay chain) → substantial 225Ac-based cytotoxicity | ||||
| 0.05-0.10 | 0.77 | • | • Short T ½ compromises the residence time required in essential (infiltrating) GB cells, i.e. ratio between cell membrane coverage (receptor affinity) and time is key (Note: irrelevant for intratumoral injection or CED). | ||||
| 0.05 | 7.20 | 123I | • | • Limited to mAb (smaller fragments). | |||
| 0.80 | 192.00 | ✔ | • | • Limited SPECT imaging capacity (suboptimal quantitative imaging); poor spatial resolution (high energy collimators/thick crystal detectors setup). | |||
| 5.30 | 64.10 | • | • Limited efficiency for minimal residual or recurrent GB: needs to be matched with GB tumor size to prevent off target (normal brain) toxicity. | ||||
| 0.62-2.00 | 158.40 | ✔ or | • Isotope characteristics capable of affecting GB lesions typically ⌀ < 3 mm diameter | • Moderately nephrotoxic and hematotoxic (< 90Y). | |||
| 5.00-10.8 | 16.98 | ✔ | • | Unfavorably-low energy characteristics | |||
| β 1.00 | 12.70 | ✔ | • Readily available. | • Radiometal complexation can be unstable | |||
| 0.20 | 62.40 | ✔ or | • Treats small residual or recurrent GB lesions (⌀ ≤5 mm) | • Large amounts rarely available; limits research and clinical trial design | |||
| 0.002 | 1425.60 | • Isotope applicable in brachytherapy for GB. | • Very long T½ may impose limitations for clinical use (radioprotection, therapeutic efficacy, slow dose rate). | ||||
| 0.001-0.01 | 13.20 | ✔ | • Short T ½ and gamma emission energy suitable for scintigraphic imaging | • Not widely available (<131I). | |||
| 0.04 | 67.20 | ✔ | • Characteristic suitable for | • Complexation chemistry required; incorporation kinetics slow for radiolabeling mAb (no direct radiometal conjugation). | |||
(✔) Theranostic radionuclide, (*) human case study, convection enhanced delivery (CED), pharmacokinetic/dosimetry studies (PK/D), glioblastoma (GB), radioimmunotherapy (RIT), oxygen enhancement ratio (OER), polyethylene glycol (PEG), Bone-marrow mesenchymal stem cells (BMSC), electron capture (EC), linear energy transfer (LET), Auger electron (AE), single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), physiological half-life (T ½ ).
Overview and characteristics of different rodent tumor models for glioblastoma imaging
| Model | Methodology | Pro | Con | Cell lines/models | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ENU-induced | • Exposure | • Immunotherapeutic research tool. | • Often ENU tumor characteristic differs from human GB; | C6, 9L, T9, RG2, F98, BT4C, and RT-2 | |
| GEMM | • Gene mutations result in spontaneous tumor formation; | • Close genetic resemblance to human GB tumors: suitable to investigate behavior of genetically defined gliomas. | • Does not completely reflect the intratumoral genomic and phenotypic heterogeneity; | EGFR amplification/Ras-gene activation (classical GB); NF1 depletion (mesenchymal GB); PDGF amplification (proneural GB) | |
| PDX | • Surgically obtained human glioma specimens. After preparing cell/tissue cultures these can also be implanted heterotopically or orthotopically in immunocompromised rodents; | • Recapitulate genetic and phenotypic features of the original tumor | • Relatively low engraftment and variable growth rate hamper standardization and experimental planning. | IDH1R132H-E478 | |
| PDGC | • High engraftment and growth rates; | • Does not recapitulate genetic and phenotypical features of original tumor. | U87, and U251 |
Footnotes and abbreviated content: Ethyl-nitrosourea (ENU)-induced gliomas, genetically engineered models (GEMM) and patient-derived xenograft or glioma cell models (PDX or PDGC), platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), blood brain barrier (BBB), glioblastoma (GB), neurofibromatosis type 1 gene (NF1), epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA).