Publication | Open Access
Radioimmunotherapy of Breast Cancer Metastases with α-Particle Emitter 225Ac: Comparing Efficacy with 213Bi and 90Y
148
Citations
31
References
2009
Year
Breast OncologyImmunologyRadiation MedicineOncologyRadiation OncologyMouse ModelRadiologyHealth SciencesRadiation TherapyAlpha-particle EmitterRadionuclide TherapyTumor TargetingCancer TreatmentBreast Cancer Metastasesα-Particle Emitter 225AcAlpha Particle TherapyBreast CancerMedicineCancer Therapeutics
Alpha‑particle radioimmunotherapy is attractive for micrometastatic disease because of its short range and high linear energy transfer, yet clinical use of 213Bi is limited by supply, short half‑life, and cost. This study evaluated the therapeutic efficacy of 225Ac, the parent nuclide of 213Bi, in a mouse model of HER‑2/neu‑positive breast cancer lung metastases. A single 400 nCi dose of 225Ac‑labeled anti‑HER‑2/neu antibody eradicated micrometastases in ~67 % of mice, extended survival to one year, and outperformed 213Bi and 90Y treatments, though renal toxicity from 225Ac daughters was observed.
alpha-Particles are suitable to treat cancer micrometastases because of their short range and very high linear energy transfer. alpha-Particle emitter (213)Bi-based radioimmunotherapy has shown efficacy in a variety of metastatic animal cancer models, such as breast, ovarian, and prostate cancers. Its clinical implementation, however, is challenging due to the limited supply of (225)Ac, high technical requirement to prepare radioimmunoconjugate with very short half-life (T(1/2) = 45.6 min) on site, and prohibitive cost. In this study, we investigated the efficacy of the alpha-particle emitter (225)Ac, parent of (213)Bi, in a mouse model of breast cancer metastases. A single administration of (225)Ac (400 nCi)-labeled anti-rat HER-2/neu monoclonal antibody (7.16.4) completely eradicated breast cancer lung micrometastases in approximately 67% of HER-2/neu transgenic mice and led to long-term survival of these mice for up to 1 year. Treatment with (225)Ac-7.16.4 is significantly more effective than (213)Bi-7.16.4 (120 microCi; median survival, 61 days; P = 0.001) and (90)Y-7.16.4 (120 microCi; median survival, 50 days; P < 0.001) as well as untreated control (median survival, 41 days; P < 0.0001). Dosimetric analysis showed that (225)Ac-treated metastases received a total dose of 9.6 Gy, significantly higher than 2.0 Gy from (213)Bi and 2.4 Gy from (90)Y. Biodistribution studies revealed that (225)Ac daughters, (221)Fr and (213)Bi, accumulated in kidneys and probably contributed to the long-term renal toxicity observed in surviving mice. These data suggest (225)Ac-labeled anti-HER-2/neu monoclonal antibody could significantly prolong survival in HER-2/neu-positive metastatic breast cancer patients.
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