Currently, most patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are diagnosed in advanced stages with a poor five-year survival rate. Therefore, intensive research aimed at finding novel therapeutic strategies has… Click to show full abstract
Currently, most patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are diagnosed in advanced stages with a poor five-year survival rate. Therefore, intensive research aimed at finding novel therapeutic strategies has been ongoing; experimental models that reliably emulate NSCLC disease are greatly needed to predict responses to novel therapeutics. Therefore, we developed patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models of NSCLC, which we then used to evaluate the therapeutic efficacy of 177Lu-EB-RGD, a peptide-based radiopharmaceutical with improved pharmacokinetics that targets integrin αvβ3. In this study, three different groups of NSCLC-PDXs were successfully established, all of which maintained the same IHC and genetic characteristics of the human primary tumor. The two NSCLC-PDX groups with intense and low expression of integrin αvβ3 (denoted as PDXαvβ3+ and PDXαvβ3-) were chosen as the experimental models to evaluate the in vivo biological behavior of 177Lu-EB-RGD. In SPECT imaging and biodistribution studies, 177Lu-EB-RGD showed significantly higher accumulation in PDXαvβ3+ and PDXαvβ3- models than its corresponding monomer 177Lu-RGD. A single dose of 18.5 MBq 177Lu-EB-RGD was enough to completely eradicate the tumors in PDXαvβ3+, with no sign of tumor recurrence during the observation period. Such treatment was also efficacious in PDXαvβ3-: a single dose of 29.6 MBq 177Lu-EB-RGD led to a significant delay in tumor growth as compared with that in the control or 177Lu-RGD group. The preclinical data from the use of this model suggest that 177Lu-EB-RGD may be an effective treatment option for NSCLC and should be further evaluated in human trials.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.