Abstract

Thyroid cancers are the most frequent endocrine cancers and their incidence is increasing worldwide. Thyroid nodules occur in over 19–68% of the population, but only 7–15% of them are diagnosed as malignant. Diagnosis relies on a fine needle aspiration biopsy, which is often inconclusive and about 90% of thyroidectomies are performed for benign lesions. Galectin-1 has been proposed as a confident biomarker for the discrimination of malignant from benign nodules. We previously identified by phage display two peptides (P1 and P7) targeting galectin-1, with the goal of developing imaging probes for non-invasive diagnosis of thyroid cancer. The peptides were coupled to ultra-small superparamagnetic particles of iron oxide (USPIO) or to a near-infrared dye (CF770) for non-invasive detection of galectin-1 expression in a mouse model of papillary thyroid cancer (PTC, as the most frequent one) by magnetic resonance imaging and fluorescence lifetime imaging. The imaging probes functionalized with the two peptides presented comparable image enhancement characteristics. However, those coupled to P7 were more favorable, and showed decreased retention by the liver and spleen (known for their galectin-1 expression) and high sensitivity (75%) and specificity (100%) of PTC detection, which confirm the aptitude of this peptide to discriminate human malignant from benign nodules (80% sensitivity, 100% specificity) previously observed by immunohistochemistry.

Highlights

  • As the most common endocrine malignancy, thyroid cancer is increasingly diagnosed worldwide with an incidence rate that is growing steadily and a prevalence that is higher in women [1,2,3,4,5].Biology 2020, 9, 53; doi:10.3390/biology9030053 www.mdpi.com/journal/biologyAccording to the American Cancer Society, about 52,890 new cases of thyroid cancer are estimated to occur in 2020, with a clear predominance in women (40,170 women vs. 12,720 men), and about 2180 deaths are caused by this pathology (1140 women vs. 1040 men).Well-differentiated papillary carcinoma (PC) and follicular carcinoma (FC), as well as anaplastic carcinoma (AC) all originate from thyroid follicular cells

  • We observed higher binding of peptides Peptides 1 (P1) and P7 in malignant thyroid cases (PC, FC, and AC) than in adenoma or healthy and inflammatory thyroid, this binding being in perfect relationship with gal-1 expression as determined by anti-gal-1 antibody [28]

  • Gal-1 is expressed in all these organs, mainly at the level of the cytoplasm [40], while its presence should not be challenging for thyroid cancer diagnosis due to the distinctive organ location

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Summary

Introduction

As the most common endocrine malignancy, thyroid cancer is increasingly diagnosed worldwide with an incidence rate that is growing steadily and a prevalence that is higher in women [1,2,3,4,5].Biology 2020, 9, 53; doi:10.3390/biology9030053 www.mdpi.com/journal/biologyAccording to the American Cancer Society, about 52,890 new cases of thyroid cancer are estimated to occur in 2020, with a clear predominance in women (40,170 women vs. 12,720 men), and about 2180 deaths are caused by this pathology (1140 women vs. 1040 men).Well-differentiated papillary carcinoma (PC) and follicular carcinoma (FC), as well as anaplastic carcinoma (AC) all originate from thyroid follicular cells. As the most common endocrine malignancy, thyroid cancer is increasingly diagnosed worldwide with an incidence rate that is growing steadily and a prevalence that is higher in women [1,2,3,4,5]. PC accounts for about 70% of thyroid cancers, while FC is less frequent, with an incidence of about 15–20%. Hürthle cell carcinoma is a differentiated thyroid cancer that is less frequent (about 10%) and characterized by a reduced survival rate [5]. Medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) is even less frequent, with an incidence rate between 3% and 5% [3,5]. Thyroid cancer mortality is as low as 0.5 cases per 100,000 patients [1], but about 30% of the tumors can generate highly malignant AC characterized by a survival time of less than eight months [4]

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