Introducing an albumin-binding entity into otherwise short-lived radiopharmaceuticals can be an effective means to improve their pharmacokinetic properties due to enhanced blood residence time. In the current study, DOTA-derivatized albumin binders based on 4-(-iodophenyl)butanoate (DOTA-ALB-1 and DOTA-ALB-3) and 5-(-iodophenyl)pentanoate entities (DOTA-ALB-24 and DOTA-ALB-25) without and with a hydrophobic 4-(aminomethyl)benzoic acid (AMBA) linker unit, respectively, were synthesized and labeled with lutetium-177 for in vitro and in vivo comparison. Overall, [Lu]Lu-DOTA-ALB-1 demonstrated ~3-fold stronger in vitro albumin-binding affinity and a longer blood residence time (T ~8 h) than [Lu]Lu-DOTA-ALB-24 (T ~0.8 h). Introducing an AMBA linker enhanced the albumin-binding affinity, resulting in a T of ~24 h for [Lu]Lu-DOTA-ALB-3 and ~2 h for [Lu]Lu-DOTA-ALB-25. The same albumin binders without or with the AMBA linker were incorporated into 6- and 6-5-methyltetrahydrofolate-based DOTA-conjugates (Lu-RedFols). Biodistribution studies in mice performed with both diastereoisomers of [Lu]Lu-RedFol-1 and [Lu]Lu-RedFol-3, which comprised the 4-(-iodophenyl)butanoate moiety, demonstrated a slower accumulation in KB tumors than those of [Lu]Lu-RedFol-24 and [Lu]Lu-RedFol-25 with the 5-(-iodophenyl)pentanoate entity. In all cases, the tumor uptake was high (30-45% IA/g) 24 h after injection. Both diastereoisomers of [Lu]Lu-RedFol-1 and [Lu]Lu-RedFol-3 demonstrated high blood retention (3.8-8.7% IA/g, 24 h p.i.) and a 2- to 4-fold lower kidney uptake than the corresponding diastereoisomers of [Lu]Lu-RedFol-24 and [Lu]Lu-RedFol-25, which were more rapidly cleared from the blood (<0.2% IA/g, 24 h after injection). Kidney retention of the 6-diastereoisomers of all Lu-RedFols was consistently higher than that of the respective 6-diastereoisomers, irrespective of the albumin binder and linker unit used. It was demonstrated that the blood clearance data obtained with Lu-DOTA-ALBs had predictive value for the blood retention times of the respective folate radioconjugates. The use of these albumin-binding entities without or with an AMBA linker may serve for fine-tuning the blood retention of folate radioconjugates and also other radiopharmaceuticals and, hence, optimize their tissue distribution profiles. Dosimetry estimations based on patient data obtained with one of the most promising folate radioconjugates will be crucial to identify the dose-limiting organ, which will allow for selecting the most suitable folate radioconjugate for therapeutic purposes.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10486429PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15174259DOI Listing

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