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Publication | Open Access

Real-Time Transferrin-Based PET Detects MYC-Positive Prostate Cancer

19

Citations

28

References

2017

Year

Abstract

Noninvasive biomarkers that detect the activity of important oncogenic drivers could significantly improve cancer diagnosis and management of treatment. The goal of this study was to determine whether <sup>68</sup>Ga-citrate (which avidly binds to circulating transferrin) can detect MYC-positive prostate cancer tumors, as the transferrin receptor is a direct MYC target gene. PET imaging paired with <sup>68</sup>Ga-citrate and molecular analysis of preclinical models, human cell-free DNA (cfDNA), and clinical biopsies were conducted to determine whether <sup>68</sup>Ga-citrate can detect MYC-positive prostate cancer. Importantly, <sup>68</sup>Ga-citrate detected human prostate cancer models in a MYC-dependent fashion. In patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer, analysis of cfDNA revealed that all patients with <sup>68</sup>Ga-citrate avid tumors had a gain of at least one <i>MYC</i> copy number. Moreover, biopsy of two PET avid metastases showed molecular or histologic features characteristic of MYC hyperactivity. These data demonstrate that <sup>68</sup>Ga-citrate targets prostate cancer tumors with MYC hyperactivity. A larger prospective study is ongoing to demonstrate the specificity of <sup>68</sup>Ga-citrate for tumors with hyperactive MYC.<b>Implications:</b> Noninvasive measurement of MYC activity with quantitative imaging modalities could substantially increase our understanding of the role of MYC signaling in clinical settings for which invasive techniques are challenging to implement or do not characterize the biology of all tumors in a patient. Moreover, measuring MYC activity noninvasively opens the opportunity to study changes in MYC signaling in patients under targeted therapeutic conditions thought to indirectly inhibit MYC. <i>Mol Cancer Res; 15(9); 1221-9. ©2017 AACR</i>.

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