Lindegren Sture, Frost Sofia H L
Department of Radiation Physics, Institute of Clinical Sciences, the Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
Curr Radiopharm. 2011 Jul;4(3):248-60. doi: 10.2174/1874471011104030248.
Alpha-particle emitting radionuclides are attractive for targeted cancer therapies due to their physicochemical properties. Their high linear energy transfer (LET) and short particle range makes them particularly toxic at a microscopic level, which is ideal for treating disseminated micrometastases. However, their cytotoxic properties also place special demands on the pharmacokinetics of the tumor specific carrier vector, where high tumor-to-normal-tissue ratios are a prerequisite. Tumor specific antibodies are perhaps the most common vector for targeted therapy, but due to pharmacokinetics considerations antibodies will generally not meet the standard for α-particle radioimmunotherapy. However, the tumor specificity of monoclonal antibodies may be used in pretargeting techniques, strategies used to increase the selectivity of the radioactivity. The basic concept of pretargeting relies on a separate administration of a modified antibody and a radioactive ligand. The modified antibody is first injected and allowed to localize on the tumor. Then, the radiolabeled ligand is injected, which is a small molecule that rapidly localizes the modified antibody on tumor cells while non-localized ligand rapidly clears from the circulation, preferably through renal filtration. Several pretargeting strategies have been developed, in particular the avidin-biotin system and bispecific antibodies. Approaches under evaluation are the use of complementary DNA, morpholinos, and the use of infinite antigen binding. Preclinical and clinical studies of pretargeting have shown that favorable distribution of the radioactivity can be achieved, which may increase dose to the tumor as compared with the dose from directly labeled antibodies, and most important decrease the dose to normal tissues. This survey describes different pretargeting strategies, and includes a review of pretargeting with α emitting radionuclides.
发射α粒子的放射性核素因其物理化学性质而在靶向癌症治疗中具有吸引力。它们的高线性能量转移(LET)和短粒子射程使其在微观层面具有特别的毒性,这对于治疗播散性微转移瘤非常理想。然而,它们的细胞毒性特性也对肿瘤特异性载体的药代动力学提出了特殊要求,其中高肿瘤与正常组织比值是一个先决条件。肿瘤特异性抗体可能是靶向治疗中最常见的载体,但出于药代动力学考虑,抗体通常不符合α粒子放射免疫治疗的标准。然而,单克隆抗体的肿瘤特异性可用于预靶向技术,即用于提高放射性选择性的策略。预靶向的基本概念依赖于分别给予修饰抗体和放射性配体。首先注射修饰抗体并使其在肿瘤上定位。然后,注射放射性标记的配体,这是一种小分子,可迅速将修饰抗体定位在肿瘤细胞上,而非定位的配体则迅速从循环中清除,最好是通过肾脏滤过。已经开发了几种预靶向策略,特别是抗生物素蛋白-生物素系统和双特异性抗体。正在评估的方法包括使用互补DNA、吗啉代以及无限抗原结合的应用。预靶向的临床前和临床研究表明,可以实现放射性的良好分布,与直接标记抗体的剂量相比,这可能会增加肿瘤的剂量,并且最重要的是减少正常组织的剂量。本综述描述了不同的预靶向策略,并包括对发射α粒子的放射性核素预靶向的综述。