Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Pemetrexed Improves Tumor Selectivity of 111 In-DTPA-Folate in Mice with Folate Receptor–Positive Ovarian Cancer

2008; Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging; Volume: 49; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2967/jnumed.107.047704

ISSN

1535-5667

Autores

Cristina Müller, Roger Schibli, Eric P. Krenning, Marion de Jong,

Tópico(s)

Lung Cancer Treatments and Mutations

Resumo

Folate-based radiopharmaceuticals can be used as imaging agents and for potential radiotherapy of folate receptor (FR)–positive malignant tissue (e.g., ovarian carcinomas). However, substantial FR expression in the kidneys results in undesired renal retention of radioactivity. Recently, we found that the preinjection of an antifolate significantly improved tumor selectivity of organometallic 99m Tc-radiofolates in mice. The aim of this study was to corroborate the effect of pemetrexed with the clinically tested 111 In-DTPA-folate (DTPA is diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid) in a human ovarian cancer xenografted mouse model. Methods: In vivo studies were performed in female athymic nude mice bearing subcutaneous FR-positive ovarian tumors (IGROV-1 and SKOV-3) or metastases (after intraperitoneal SKOV-3 cell inoculation). Biodistribution studies were performed 1, 4, and 24 h after administration of 111 In-DTPA-folate (0.7 MBq/mouse, 0.35 μg) with or without preinjection of pemetrexed (PMX, 400 μg) 1 h before the radiofolate. Images were acquired with a high-resolution, high-sensitivity SPECT/CT camera, 4 and 24 h after injection of the radiotracer (30–50 MBq/mouse, 4.5–10 μg). Results: In biodistribution studies the tumor uptake of 111 In-DTPA-folate (IGROV-1: 9.79 ± 3.21 %ID/g [percentage injected dose per gram]; SKOV-3: 7.57 ± 0.61 %ID/g, 4 h after injection) was high and retained over the time of investigation. However, considerable retention of radioactivity was found in kidneys (85–105 %ID/g, 4 h after injection), resulting in unfavorably low tumor-to-kidney ratios (∼0.10). Preinjection of PMX resulted in a significant reduction of renal uptake (20%–30% of control values, P < 0.03) at all time points after injection of 111 In-DTPA-folate, whereas the tumor uptake was retained. Thus, the tumor-to-kidney ratio was significantly increased to ∼0.50. SPECT/CT images confirmed the superior tumor-to-background ratio in mice injected with PMX. These findings were particularly evident in mice with SKOV-3 metastases that could be visualized only when 111 In-DTPA-folate was administered in combination with PMX. Conclusion: The application of PMX resulted in a significant reduction of undesired radioactivity accumulation in kidneys, whereas the tumor uptake remained unaffected. These observations suggest a general validity of the reducing effect of PMX on the uptake of radiofolates in kidneys. Our findings will lead the way toward the development of folate-based radiotherapy.

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