Publication | Open Access
The Emission of Internal Conversion Electrons Rather Than Auger Electrons Increased the Nucleus-Absorbed Dose for<sup>161</sup>Tb Compared with<sup>177</sup>Lu with a Higher Dose Response for [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb-DOTA-LM3 Than for [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb-DOTATATE
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Citations
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References
2024
Year
Preclinical data have shown that <sup>161</sup>Tb-labeled peptides targeting the somatostatin receptor are therapeutically more effective for peptide receptor radionuclide therapy than are their <sup>177</sup>Lu-labeled counterparts. To further substantiate this enhanced therapeutic effect, we performed cellular dosimetry to quantify the absorbed dose to the cell nucleus and compared dose-response curves to evaluate differences in relative biological effectiveness in vitro. <b>Methods:</b> CA20948 cell survival was assessed after treatment with [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb- and [<sup>177</sup>Lu]Lu-DOTATATE (agonist) and with [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb- and [<sup>177</sup>Lu]Lu-DOTA-LM3 (antagonist) via a clonogenic assay. Cell binding, internalization, and dissociation assays were performed up to 7 d to acquire time-integrated activity coefficients. Separate <i>S</i> values for each type of particle emission (Auger/internal conversion [IC] electrons and β<sup>-</sup> particles) were computed via Monte Carlo simulations, while considering spheric cells. Once the absorbed dose to the cell nucleus was calculated, survival curves were fitted to the appropriate linear or linear-quadratic model and corresponding relative biological effectiveness was evaluated. <b>Results:</b> Although the radiopeptide uptake was independent of the radionuclide, [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb-DOTATATE and [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb-DOTA-LM3 delivered a 3.6 and 3.8 times higher dose to the nucleus, respectively, than their <sup>177</sup>Lu-labeled counterparts on saturated receptor binding. This increased nucleus-absorbed dose was mainly due to the additional emission of IC and not Auger electrons by <sup>161</sup>Tb. When activity concentrations were considered, both [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb-DOTATATE and [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb-DOTA-LM3 showed a lower survival fraction than did labeling with <sup>177</sup>Lu. When the absorbed dose to the nucleus was considered, no significant difference could be observed between the dose-response curves for [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb- and [<sup>177</sup>Lu]Lu-DOTATATE. [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb-DOTA-LM3 showed a linear-quadratic dose response, whereas [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb-DOTATATE showed only a linear dose response within the observed dose range, suggesting additional cell membrane damage by Auger electrons. <b>Conclusion:</b> The IC, rather than Auger, electrons emitted by <sup>161</sup>Tb resulted in a higher absorbed dose to the cell nucleus and lower clonogenic survival for [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb-DOTATATE and [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb-DOTA-LM3 than for the <sup>177</sup>Lu-labeled analogs. In contrast, [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb-DOTATATE showed no higher dose response than [<sup>177</sup>Lu]Lu-DOTATATE, whereas for [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb-DOTA-LM3 an additional quadratic response was observed. Because of this quadratic response, potentially caused by cell membrane damage, [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb-DOTA-LM3 is a more effective radiopeptide than [<sup>161</sup>Tb]Tb-DOTATATE for labeling with <sup>161</sup>Tb.
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