Bergstrom Mats, Monazzam Azita, Razifar Pasha, Ide Susan, Josephsson Raymond, Langstrom Bengt
Clinical Imaging, Novartis Pharma AG, Basel, Switzerland.
J Nucl Med. 2008 Jul;49(7):1204-10. doi: 10.2967/jnumed.108.050799. Epub 2008 Jun 13.
For a PET agent to be successful as a biomarker in early clinical trials of new anticancer agents, some conditions need to be fulfilled: the selected tracer should show a response that is related to the antitumoral effects, the quantitative value of this response should be interpretable to the antitumoral action, and the timing of the PET scan should be optimized to action of the drug. These conditions are not necessarily known at the start of a drug-development program and need to be explored. We proposed a translational imaging activity in which experiments in spheroids and later in xenografts are coupled to modeling of growth inhibition and to the related changes in the kinetics of PET tracers and other biomarkers. In addition, we demonstrated how this information can be used for planning clinical trials.
The first part of this concept is illustrated in a spheroid model with BT474 breast cancer cells treated with the heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) inhibitor NVP-AUY922. The growth-inhibitory effect after a pulse treatment with the drug was measured with digital image analysis to determine effects on volume with high accuracy. The growth-inhibitory effect was described mathematically by a combined E(max) and time course model fitted to the data. The model was then used to simulate a once-per-week treatment; in these experiments the uptake of the PET tracers (18)F-FDG and 3'-deoxy-3'-(18)F-fluorothymidine ((18)F-FLT) was determined at different doses and different time points.
A drug exposure of 2 h followed by washout of the drug from the culture medium generated growth inhibition that was maximal at the earliest time point of 1 d and decreased exponentially with time during 10-12 d. The uptake of (18)F-FDG per viable tumor volume was minimally affected by the treatment, whereas the (18)F-FLT uptake decreased in correlation with the growth inhibition.
The study suggests a prolonged action of the Hsp90 inhibitor that supports a once-per-week schedule. (18)F-FLT is a suitable tracer for the monitoring of effect, and the (18)F-FLT PET study might be performed within 3 d after dosing.
为使正电子发射断层显像(PET)剂在新型抗癌剂的早期临床试验中成功作为生物标志物,需要满足一些条件:所选示踪剂应显示出与抗肿瘤效应相关的反应,该反应的定量值应能解释抗肿瘤作用,并且PET扫描的时间应根据药物作用进行优化。这些条件在药物研发项目开始时不一定已知,需要进行探索。我们提出了一项转化成像活动,其中在球体以及随后的异种移植中的实验与生长抑制建模以及PET示踪剂和其他生物标志物动力学的相关变化相结合。此外,我们展示了如何将这些信息用于规划临床试验。
这一概念的第一部分在一个球体模型中得到说明,该模型使用热休克蛋白90(Hsp90)抑制剂NVP - AUY922处理BT474乳腺癌细胞。用数字图像分析测量药物脉冲处理后的生长抑制作用,以高精度确定对体积的影响。通过拟合数据的E(max)和时间进程组合模型对生长抑制作用进行数学描述。然后使用该模型模拟每周一次的治疗;在这些实验中,在不同剂量和不同时间点测定PET示踪剂(18)F - FDG和3'-脱氧-3'-(18)F - 氟胸苷((18)F - FLT)的摄取情况。
药物暴露2小时后,从培养基中洗脱药物产生了生长抑制,在最早的1天时间点达到最大,并在10 - 12天内随时间呈指数下降。每单位存活肿瘤体积的(18)F - FDG摄取受治疗的影响最小,而(18)F - FLT摄取与生长抑制相关下降。
该研究表明Hsp90抑制剂具有延长的作用,支持每周一次的给药方案。(18)F - FLT是监测疗效的合适示踪剂,(18)F - FLT PET研究可在给药后3天内进行。