1. Comparison of the binding of the gastrin-releasing peptide receptor (GRP-R) antagonist 68Ga-RM2 and 18F-FDG in breast cancer samples.
- Author
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Morgat, Clément, Schollhammer, Romain, Macgrogan, Gaétan, Barthe, Nicole, Vélasco, Valérie, Vimont, Delphine, Cazeau, Anne-Laure, Fernandez, Philippe, and Hindié, Elif
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GASTRIN-releasing peptide ,ESTROGEN receptors ,BREAST cancer ,LYMPH node cancer ,PROGESTERONE receptors - Abstract
The Gastrin-Releasing Peptide Receptor (GRPR) is over-expressed in estrogen receptor (ER) positive breast tumors and related metastatic lymph nodes offering the opportunity of imaging and therapy of luminal tumors.
68 Ga-RM2 binding and18 F-FDG binding in tumoral zones were measured and compared using tissue micro-imaging with a beta imager on 14 breast cancer samples (10 primaries and 4 associated metastatic lymph nodes). Results were then assessed against ER expression, progesterone receptor (PR) expression, HER2 over-expression or not and Ki-67 expression. GRPR immunohistochemistry (IHC) was also performed on all samples. We also retrospectively compared68 Ga-RM2 and18 F-FDG bindings to18 F-FDG SUVmax on the pre-therapeutic PET/CT examination, if available.68 Ga-RM2 binding was significantly higher in tumors expressing GRPR on IHC than in GRPR-negative tumors (P = 0.022). In ER+ tumors, binding of68 Ga-RM2 was significantly higher than18 F-FDG (P = 0.015). In tumors with low Ki-67,68 Ga-RM2 binding was also significantly increased compared to18 F-FDG (P = 0.029). Overall, the binding of68 Ga-RM2 and18 F-FDG displayed an opposite pattern in tumor samples and68 Ga-RM2 binding was significantly higher in tumors that had low18 F-FDG binding (P = 0.021). This inverse correlation was also documented in the few patients in whom a18 F-FDG PET/CT examination before surgery was available. Findings from this in vitro study suggest that GRPR targeting can be an alternative to18 F-FDG imaging in ER+ breast tumors. Moreover, because GRPR antagonists can also be labeled with lutetium-177 this opens new avenues for targeted radionuclide therapy in the subset of patients with progressive metastatic disease following conventional treatments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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