Tumor dosimetry using [124I]m-iodobenzylguanidine microPET/CT for [131I]m-iodobenzylguanidine treatment of neuroblastoma in a murine xenograft model.

Autor: Seo Y, Gustafson WC, Dannoon SF, Nekritz EA, Lee CL, Murphy ST, Vanbrocklin HF, Hernandez-Pampaloni M, Haas-Kogan DA, Weiss WA, Matthay KK, Seo, Youngho, Gustafson, W Clay, Dannoon, Shorouk F, Nekritz, Erin A, Lee, Chang-Lae, Murphy, Stephanie T, VanBrocklin, Henry F, Hernandez-Pampaloni, Miguel, Haas-Kogan, Daphne A
Zdroj: Molecular Imaging & Biology; Dec2012, Vol. 14 Issue 6, p735-742, 8p
Abstrakt: Purpose: [(124)I]m-iodobenzylguanidine ((124)I-mIBG) provides a quantitative tool for pretherapy tumor imaging and dosimetry when performed before [(131)I]m-iodobenzylguanidine ((131)I-mIBG) targeted radionuclide therapy of neuroblastoma. (124)I (T (1/2) = 4.2 days) has a comparable half-life to that of (131)I (T (1/2) = 8.02 days) and can be imaged by positron emission tomography (PET) for accurate quantification of the radiotracer distribution. We estimated expected radiation dose in tumors from (131)I-mIBG therapy using (124)I-mIBG microPET/CT imaging data in a murine xenograft model of neuroblastoma transduced to express high levels of the human norepinephrine transporter (hNET).Procedures: In order to enhance mIBG uptake for in vivo imaging and therapy, NB 1691-luciferase (NB1691) human neuroblastoma cells were engineered to express high levels of hNET protein by lentiviral transduction (NB1691-hNET). Both NB1691 and NB1691-hNET cells were implanted subcutaneously and into renal capsules in athymic mice. (124)I-mIBG (4.2-6.5 MBq) was administered intravenously for microPET/CT imaging at 5 time points over 95 h (0.5, 3-5, 24, 48, and 93-95 h median time points). In vivo biodistribution data in normal organs, tumors, and whole-body were collected from reconstructed PET images corrected for photon attenuation using the CT-based attenuation map. Organ and tumor dosimetry were determined for (124)I-mIBG. Dose estimates for (131)I-mIBG were made, assuming the same in vivo biodistribution as (124)I-mIBG.Results: All NB1691-hNET tumors had significant uptake and retention of (124)I-mIBG, whereas unmodified NB1691 tumors did not demonstrate quantifiable mIBG uptake in vivo, despite in vitro uptake. (124)I-mIBG with microPET/CT provided an accurate three-dimensional tool for estimating the radiation dose that would be delivered with (131)I-mIBG therapy. For example, in our model system, we estimated that the administration of (131)I-mIBG in the range of 52.8-206 MBq would deliver 20 Gy to tumors.Conclusions: The overexpression of hNET was found to be critical for (124)I-mIBG uptake and retention in vivo. The quantitative (124)I-mIBG PET/CT is a promising new tool to predict tumor radiation doses with (131)I-mIBG therapy of neuroblastoma. This methodology may be applied to tumor dosimetry of (131)I-mIBG therapy in human subjects using (124)I-mIBG pretherapy PET/CT data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index