News

Immuno-PET shows promise for detecting and treating pancreatic tumors

14 Jun 2017
Immuno-PET shows promise for detecting and treating pancreatic tumors

Pancreatic cancer is associated with bleak five-year survival rates and limited treatment options, but new research is offering hope.

A first-in-human study presented at the 2017 Annual Meeting of the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (SNMMI) demonstrates the feasibility and safety of the novel human monoclonal antibody HuMab-5B1 with highly specific targeting for the cancer antigen (CA) 19-9, which is expressed on pancreatic tumours and a variety of other malignancies, including small cell lung cancer and tumours of the gastrointestinal system.

It holds the promise of better identifying tumours and directing treatment.

"This new agent is intensely accumulated in pancreatic cancer and finds very small metastases with PET/CT imaging," explained Christian Lohrmann, MD, lead author of the study from Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, NY. "There are promising data that HuMab-5B1 could become a theranostic drug used in both targeted imaging and therapy, which could eventually improve the prognosis for pancreatic cancer patients."

The researchers evaluated the antibody with and without radiolabeling with zirconium-89 (89Zr-DFO-HuMab-5B1).

With further validation, 89Zr-DFO-HuMab-5B1 could lead to a host of improvements in pancreatic cancer management--more accurate staging of tumours, better surgical guidance, restaging of metastases and potential drug selection for CA 19-9 targeted therapies.

The high uptake of the antibody alone suggests that it could be used by itself, or radiolabeled, or coupled with another molecular compound to treat high-risk pancreatic tumours that are inoperable or metastatic.

For this study, nine patients with CA 19-9-positive metastatic malignancies underwent a series of four whole-body PET/CT scans; one the first day of injection with the imaging agent, then again on day two and around days four and seven.

Subjects also received a diagnostic computed tomography (CT) scan of the chest, abdomen and pelvis within the four weeks leading up to baseline PET/CT. Results of the CT scan were used to verify the results of 89Zr-DFO-HuMab-5B PET/CT imaging.

Maximum standard uptake values normalised for body weight were analysed for agent uptake in tumours.

The agent was well tolerated and led to no serious side effects.

Significant uptake was detected in local tumour recurrences as well as in metastases (for example in the lymph nodes, lungs, bone and peritoneum lining of the abdominal cavity).

Uptake was analysed for a total of 52 lesions.

Highest uptake was shown on day seven in the lymph nodes.

Results of the study showed that PET/CT imaging with the monoclonal antibody led to the detection of tiny tumours in the peritoneum and mesenteric lymph nodes that were not found by CT alone.

Source: SNMMI