Abstract

Simple SummaryPeptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT) is a systemic treatment consisting of the administration of a tumor-targeting radiopharmaceutical into the circulation of a patient. The radiopharmaceutical will bind to a specific peptide receptor leading to tumor-specific binding and retention. This will subsequently cause lethal DNA damage to the tumor cell. The only target that is currently used in widespread clinical practice is the somatostatin receptor, which is overexpressed on a range of tumor cells, including neuroendocrine tumors and neural-crest derived tumors. Academia played an important role in the development of PRRT, which has led to heterogeneous literature over the last two decades, as no standard radiopharmaceutical or regimen has been available for a long time. This review focuses on the basic principles and clinical applications of PRRT, and discusses several PRRT-optimization strategies.Peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT) consists of the administration of a tumor-targeting radiopharmaceutical into the circulation of a patient. The radiopharmaceutical will bind to a specific peptide receptor leading to tumor-specific binding and retention. The only target that is currently used in clinical practice is the somatostatin receptor (SSTR), which is overexpressed on a range of tumor cells, including neuroendocrine tumors and neural-crest derived tumors. Academia played an important role in the development of PRRT, which has led to heterogeneous literature over the last two decades, as no standard radiopharmaceutical or regimen has been available for a long time. This review provides a summary of the treatment efficacy (e.g., response rates and symptom-relief), impact on patient outcome and toxicity profile of PRRT performed with different generations of SSTR-targeting radiopharmaceuticals, including the landmark randomized-controlled trial NETTER-1. In addition, multiple optimization strategies for PRRT are discussed, i.e., the dose–effect concept, dosimetry, combination therapies (i.e., tandem/duo PRRT, chemoPRRT, targeted molecular therapy, somatostatin analogues and radiosensitizers), new radiopharmaceuticals (i.e., SSTR-antagonists, Evans-blue containing vector molecules and alpha-emitters), administration route (intra-arterial versus intravenous) and response prediction via molecular testing or imaging. The evolution and continuous refinement of PRRT resulted in many lessons for the future development of radionuclide therapy aimed at other targets and tumor types.

Highlights

  • All values are IC50 ± standard error of the mean, in nM

  • Peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT) is a systemic treatment consisting of the administration of a tumor-targeting radiopharmaceutical into the circulation of a patient

  • This review focuses primarily on the clinical studies involving PRRT for the somatostatin receptor

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Summary

Peptide Receptor Radionuclide Therapy

Peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT) is a systemic treatment consisting of the administration of a tumor-targeting radiopharmaceutical into the circulation of a patient. Since agonist SSAs lead to internalization into the cytoplasm, but not the nucleus, it was rapidly realized that beta-emitting radiopharmaceuticals, with longer ranges, might generate better clinical results This led to the development of second generation 90Y-DOTATyr3-Octreotide (90Y-DOTATOC) [19], using the high energy pure β-emitter yttrium-90 (90Y; Emax: 2.28 MeV; Emean: 0.935 MeV) with tissue penetration of ~11 mm [20]. Decay of lutetium-177 is associated with γ-emission (113 and 208 keV at 6.4% and 11% yield, respectively) [20] and allows dosimetry of actual absorbed dose of tumors and organs at risk, such as the kidneys, on a patient-specific basis This radiopharmaceutical has emerged as the current clinical standard and is the only one authorized by the American Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and European Medicines Agency (EMA). First Author Imhof [23] Brabander [45] Hörsch [46] Kwekkeboom [47] Garske-Roman [48] Hamiditabar [49] Mariniello [50] Kunikowska [51] Fröss-Baron [52] Ezziddin [53] Pfeifer [54]

Design R R
Lung NET
Effect on Symptoms
Toxicity
ChemoPRRT
Targeted Molecular Therapy
Radiosensitizers
Evans Blue
Alpha-Emitters
Response Prediction
Molecular Testing
Findings
Imaging
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