The use of an albumin binder has been shown to improve tumor uptake of prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA)-targeting radiotherapeutic agents. The aim of this study was to develop improved radiotherapeutic agents that combine an optimized affinity-modifying group and optimized albumin binders to maximize the tumor-to-kidney absorbed dose ratio. Ga-labeled DOTA-conjugated lysine-ureido-glutamate-based PSMA-targeting agents bearing various affinity-modifying groups or albumin binders were synthesized and evaluated by PET/CT imaging and biodistribution studies in LNCaP tumor-bearing mice. The optimized affinity-modifying group and albumin binders were combined, and the resulting derivatives were radiolabeled with Lu and evaluated by SPECT/CT imaging and biodistribution studies in LNCaP tumor-bearing mice. Radiation dosimetry was calculated using the OLINDA/EXM software. Affinity-modifying group optimization revealed that Ga-HTK03041 bearing a tranexamic acid-9-anthrylalanine affinity-modifying group had the highest tumor uptake (23.1 ± 6.11 percentage injected dose [%ID]/g at 1 h after injection). Albumin binder optimization showed that Ga-HTK03055 and Ga-HTK03086 bearing the -(4-(-chlorophenyl)butanoyl)-Gly and -(4-(-methoxyphenyl)butanoyl)-Gly motifs, respectively, had relatively faster tumor accumulation (∼30 %ID/g at 3 h after injection) and lower average kidney uptake (<55 %ID/g at both 1 and 3 h after injection). Combining the tranexamic acid-9-anthrylalanine affinity-modifying group with -(4-(-chlorophenyl)butanoyl)-Gly and -(4-(-methoxyphenyl)butanoyl)-Gly albumin-binding motifs generated HTK03121 and HTK03123, respectively. Lu-HTK03121 and Lu-HTK03123 had extremely high peak uptake (104 ± 20.3 and 70.8 ± 23.7 %ID/g, respectively) in LNCaP tumor xenografts, and this peak was sustained up to 120 h after injection. Dosimetry calculation showed that compared with Lu-PSMA-617, Lu-HTK03121 and Lu-HTK03123 delivered 18.7- and 12.7-fold higher absorbed dose to tumor but only 6.4- and 6.3-fold higher absorbed dose to kidneys, leading to 2.9- and 2.0-fold improvement in the tumor-to-kidney absorbed dose ratios. With greatly enhanced tumor uptake and tumor-to-kidney absorbed dose ratio, Lu-HTK03121 and Lu-HTK03123 have the potential to improve treatment efficacy using significantly lower quantities of Lu and are promising candidates for clinical translation to treat metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8049373 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.2967/jnumed.120.250738 | DOI Listing |
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