Abstract

Purpose: To determine whether deposition characteristics of ferumoxytol (FMX) iron nanoparticles in tumors, identified by quantitative MRI, may predict tumor lesion response to nanoliposomal irinotecan (nal-IRI).Experimental Design: Eligible patients with previously treated solid tumors had FMX-MRI scans before and following (1, 24, and 72 hours) FMX injection. After MRI acquisition, R2* signal was used to calculate FMX levels in plasma, reference tissue, and tumor lesions by comparison with a phantom-based standard curve. Patients then received nal-IRI (70 mg/m2 free base strength) biweekly until progression. Two percutaneous core biopsies were collected from selected tumor lesions 72 hours after FMX or nal-IRI.Results: Iron particle levels were quantified by FMX-MRI in plasma, reference tissues, and tumor lesions in 13 of 15 eligible patients. On the basis of a mechanistic pharmacokinetic model, tissue permeability to FMX correlated with early FMX-MRI signals at 1 and 24 hours, while FMX tissue binding contributed at 72 hours. Higher FMX levels (ranked relative to median value of multiple evaluable lesions from 9 patients) were significantly associated with reduction in lesion size by RECIST v1.1 at early time points (P < 0.001 at 1 hour and P < 0.003 at 24 hours FMX-MRI, one-way ANOVA). No association was observed with post-FMX levels at 72 hours. Irinotecan drug levels in lesions correlated with patient's time on treatment (Spearman ρ = 0.7824; P = 0.0016).Conclusions: Correlation between FMX levels in tumor lesions and nal-IRI activity suggests that lesion permeability to FMX and subsequent tumor uptake may be a useful noninvasive and predictive biomarker for nal-IRI response in patients with solid tumors. Clin Cancer Res; 23(14); 3638-48. ©2017 AACR.

Highlights

  • Liposomal drug delivery carriers can enhance utility of existing anticancer drugs by shielding the encapsulated drug from rapid clearance and metabolism, and extending mean residence time in plasma and tumor tissue [1, 2]

  • No association was observed with post-FMX levels at 72 hours

  • Our results indicate that lesion FMX measurements at up to 24 hours strongly correlated with lesion-specific permeability parameters from a FMX mechanistic pharmacokinetic model

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Summary

Introduction

Liposomal drug delivery carriers can enhance utility of existing anticancer drugs by shielding the encapsulated drug from rapid clearance and metabolism, and extending mean residence time in plasma and tumor tissue [1, 2]. Note: Supplementary data for this article are available at Clinical Cancer Research Online (http://clincancerres.aacrjournals.org/). R.K. Ramanathan and R.L. Korn contributed to this article. Current address for G.J. Fetterly: Athenex, Buffalo, New York; current address for E. Bayever: Glenmark Pharmaceuticals Inc., Mahwah, New Jersey; and current address for R.

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