Abstract
In vitro receptor autoradiography was performed with 125I-JR11 and 125I-Tyr3-octreotide in cancers from prostate, breast, colon, kidney, thyroid, and lymphoid tissues as well as NETs as reference. In general, 125I-JR11 binds to many more sst2 sites than 125I-Tyr3-octreotide. In 13 breast cancers, 8 had a low binding (mean density, 844 ± 168 dpm/mg of tissue) with the agonist whereas 12 had a high binding (mean density, 4,447 ± 1,128 dpm/mg of tissue) with the antagonist. All 12 renal cell cancers showed a low binding of sst2 with the agonist (mean density, 348 ± 49 dpm/mg of tissue) whereas all cases had a high sst2 binding with the antagonist (mean density, 3,777 ± 582 dpm/mg of tissue). One of 5 medullary thyroid cancers was positive with the agonist, whereas 5 of 5 were positive with the antagonist. In 15 non-Hodgkin lymphomas, many more sst2 sites were labeled with the antagonist than with the agonist. In 14 prostate cancers, none had sst2 binding with the agonist and only 4 had a weak binding with the antagonist. None of 17 colon cancers showed sst2 sites with the agonist, and only 3 cases were weakly positive with the antagonist. In the various tumor types, adjacent sst2-expressing tissues such as vessels, lymphocytes, nerves, mucosa, or stroma were more strongly labeled with the antagonist than with the agonist. The reference NET cases, incubated with a smaller amount of tracer, were also found to have many more sst2 sites measured with the antagonist. All renal cell cancers and most breast cancers, non-Hodgkin lymphomas, and medullary thyroid cancers represent novel indications for the in vivo radiopeptide targeting of sst2 by sst2 antagonists, comparable to NET radiotargeting with sst2 agonists.
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