Radiolabeled octreotide analogs are most successfully being applied today in clinical cancer imaging and treatment. Propagation of this paradigm to other radiopeptide families has been greatly hampered by the inherent poor metabolic stability of systemically administered peptide analogs. We hypothesized that the in vivo coadministration of specific enzyme inhibitors would improve peptide bioavailability and hence tumor uptake. Through single coinjection of the neutral endopeptidase inhibitor phosphoramidon (PA), we were able to provoke remarkable rises in the percentages of circulating intact somatostatin, gastrin, and bombesin radiopeptides in mouse models, resulting in a remarkable increase in uptake in tumor xenografts in mice. Methods: The peptide conjugates [DOTA-Ala1]SS14 (DOTA-Ala-Gly-c[Cys-Lys- Asn-Phe-Phe-Trp-Lys-Thr-Phe- Thr-Ser-Cys]-OH), PanSB1 (DOTAPEG2- DTyr-Gln-Trp-Ala-Val-βAla- His-Phe-Nle-NH2), and DOTA-MG11 (DOTA-DGlu-Ala-Tyr-Gly-Trp-Met-Asp- Phe-NH2) were labeled with 111In by 20 min of heating at an acidic pH. Metabolic stability was studied with high-performance liquid chromatography analysis of blood samples collected = min after the injection of the test radiopeptide alone or with PA into mice. Biodistribution was studied after injection of each 111In-labeled radiopeptide alone or after coinjection of PA in tumor-bearing severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mice. Results: The amount of intact [111In-DOTA-Ala1] SS14 detected in the mouse circulation at = min after the injection of PA increased impressively-from less than 2% to 86%-whereas the uptake in AR4-2J xenografts rose from less than 1 percentage injected dose per gram of tissue (%ID/g) to 14%ID/g at 4 h after injection. Likewise, the coadministration of PA resulted in a marked increase in the amount of circulating intact 111In-PanSB1- from12%to 80%-at = min after injection, and radioligand uptake in human PC-3 xenografts in SCID mice escalated from less than 4 %ID/g to greater than 21 %ID/g at 4 h after injection. In a similar manner, the coadministration of PA resulted in an equally impressive increase in intact [111In- DOTA]MG11 levels in the mouse bloodstream-from less than 5% to 70%-at = min after injection, leading to a remarkable increase in radiotracer uptake-from 2 %ID/g to greater than 15 %ID/g-in both AR4-2J tumors and A431(CCKR+) tumors (i.e., tumors induced by A431 cells transfected to stably express the human cholecystokinin subtype 2 receptor) in mice at 4 h after injection. This effect was well visualized by SPECT/CT imaging of AR4-2J tumor-bearing mice at 4 h after injection. Conclusion: The results of this study clearly demonstrate that the coadministration of key enzyme inhibitors can effectively prolong the survival of radiolabeled peptides in the circulation, securing their safe transit to the target. This strategy clearly provoked an unprecedented increase in radiolabel accumulation in tumor xenografts in mice; this increase might translate into higher diagnostic sensitivity or improved therapeutic efficacy of radiopeptide drugs in cancer patients. Hence, our findings provide exciting new opportunities for the application of biodegradable (radio) peptide drugs of either natural or synthetic origin as well as for the rationale design of analogs that are stable in vivo. Copyright

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doi.org/10.2967/jnumed.113.129411, hdl.handle.net/1765/73179
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine
Department of Nuclear Medicine

Nock, B., Maina, T., Krenning, E., & de Jong, M. (2014). To serve and protect: Enzyme inhibitors as radiopeptide escorts promote tumor targeting. The Journal of Nuclear Medicine, 55(1), 121–127. doi:10.2967/jnumed.113.129411