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Data from First-in-Human Trial of Epichaperome-Targeted PET in Patients with Cancer

Authors :
Steven M. Larson
Jason S. Lewis
Gabriela Chiosis
Hanwen Zhang
Josef J. Fox
Heiko M. Schöder
Jacqueline Bromberg
Clifford A. Hudis
Serge K. Lyashchenko
Eva M. Burnazi
Mohammad M. Uddin
Stefan O. Ochiana
Tony Taldone
Danuta Zatorska
Pat B. Zanzonico
Bradley J. Beattie
Larry Norton
Komal Jhaveri
Shanu Modi
Milan Grkovski
Nagavarakishore Pillarsetty
Christina Pressl
Mark P.S. Dunphy
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Purpose:124I-PU-H71 is an investigational first-in-class radiologic agent specific for imaging tumor epichaperome formations. The intracellular epichaperome forms under cellular stress and is a clinically validated oncotherapeutic target. We conducted a first-in-human study of microdose 124I-PU-H71 for PET to study in vivo biodistribution, pharmacokinetics, metabolism, and safety; and the feasibility of epichaperome-targeted tumor imaging.Experimental Design:Adult patients with cancer (n = 30) received 124I-PU-H71 tracer (201±12 MBq, Results:124I-PU-H71 PET detected tumors of different cancer types (breast, lymphoma, neuroblastoma, genitourinary, gynecologic, sarcoma, and pancreas). 124I-PU-H71 was retained by tumors for several days while it cleared rapidly from bones, healthy soft tissues, and blood. Radiation dosimetry is favorable and patients suffered no adverse effects.Conclusions:Our first-in-human results demonstrate the safety and feasibility of noninvasive in vivo detection of tumor epichaperomes using 124I-PU-H71 PET, supporting clinical development of PU-H71 and other epichaperome-targeted therapeutics.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....164f127edfb0119709b9665af34b1911