Title: Definitions: Molecular Imaging
11845-1923
2High Spatial ResolutionCT, MRI, Optical, US
- MRI Imaging
- High Density, Internalizing Receptors
- Transferrin receptor w. Transferrin MION
- Optical Imaging
- Physiologic measurements
- Volume, flow, Hb O2
- Fluorescent-labeled ligands
- Ultrasound Imaging
- Physiologic measurements
- Targeting with a single, site-directed bubble.
3The Advantage of Radionuclides for Targeted
Imaging, especially Low Density Sites (lt20 nM)
4George Charles de Hevesy
- The first to identify the radioisotope tracer
principle. - In 1923, he used 10.6 hour lead-212 to study the
uptake of solutions in bean plants,
noninvasively. Used small, non-toxic amounts
given the sensitivity of the radioactivity
techniques. - The first experiment in animals used Bi-210 to
label and follow the circulation of Bi-containing
antisyphilitic drugs in rabbits. - In a later book with Fritz Paneth, the tracer
method was introduced as the use of radioelements
as indicators.
5- The first practical application of a radioisotope
was made by George de Hevesy in 1911. - He suspected that meals that appeared regularly
might be made from leftovers. - To confirm these suspicions de Hevesy put a small
amount of radioactive material into the remains
of a meal. - When the same meal was served, it was radioactive!
History has forgotten the landlady, but George de
Hevesy went on to win the Nobel prize in 1943 and
the Atoms for Peace award in 1959.
6Imaging the In Vivo Distribution of a Gamma
Emitting Radioisotope
7Unprecedented Progress
- 1937 Discovery of the element Tc
- 1947 Isolation of Tc-99
- 1958 Technetium Generator
- 1970 Instant DTPA, HSA, RBC Kits
- 1978 Crystal structures of potential Tc
radiopharmaceuticals - 2002-present
- Smaller, neutral, more polar inert chelates
- Maximal effective specific activity
- Tc labeled molecules 300 MW
81934 photo of Livingston and Lawrence with the
27 cyclotron at LBL
9In 1938, Glenn Seaborg and Emilio Segre
discovered Technetium-99m.
10Walter Tucker Powell Richards
11Mechanism TcO4- stannous ion reduced Tc
chelating agent or particle final product
Kit components stannous salt (reducing agent)
chelating agent or particle
12RS-123IIQNB on 5/11/83
13Market Analysis and Future Prospects
- U.S. sales of diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals
reached 1.53 billion in 2004 and are expected to
rise to 3.20 billion by 2010. - This growth will be based on introduction of new
products, strong demand for cardiology procedures
and increased sales of oncology products,
particularly FDG for PET imaging. - Nuclear cardiology sales of 1.06 billion in 2004
will increase to 1.89 billion by 2010. - FDG sales for oncology as well as cardiology and
neurology will increase from 249 million in 2004
to 522 million by 2010. - In addition, new PET radiopharmaceuticals in the
pipeline for specialized applications should add
to these sales estimates.
14Market Analysis and Future Prospects
- U.S. sales of therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals
were still on the threshold in 2005, with total
sales of 57 million. - Rapid growth is anticipated over the next 5-6
years. By 2012, therapeutic product sales should
reach 1.9 billion, with high continuing growth
beyond that time. - This will be based on the introduction of new
therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals for treating
lymphoma, colon cancer, lung cancer, prostate
cancer, bone cancer and other persistent cancers.
These agents will be used in conjunction with
traditional therapies, enhancing their
effectiveness, with better specificity and
reduced side effects. Individualized Medicine!
15DEVELOPMENT OF Enzyme/Receptor Targeting in humans
- DATE PET SPECT
- 1977 18FFDG
- 1983 11CN-MeSpip 123IIQNB
- 1984 18FCyclofoxy
- 1985 11CRaclopride 99mTcNGA
- 1985 11CCarfentanil
- 1985 11CFlumazenil
How many radiotracers have changed clinical
care? How many have been used in combination with
pharmaceuticals?
16The Principle of PET Coincidence Detection of
Two 511 KeV Gamma Rays is Used to Determine the
Position
17PET RADIONUCLIDE PRODUCTION
- T1/2 (min) E? (kev) Nuclear Reaction
- 82Rb 1.3 3350 82Sr generator
- 11C 20 960 14N (p,?) w. 6 ppm O2
- 13N 10 1190 16O (p,?)
- 15O 2.05 1720 14N (d,n) w. 2 O2
- 18F 109.6 635 20Ne (d,?) w. 0.5F2
- 18F 109.6 635 18O (p,n)
- 76Br 966 3980 75As (a,3n)
- 64Cu 762 571 64Ni (p,n)
- 124I 5976 2134 124Te (p,n)
18FDG1976 to 2002
19Imaging Saturable Sites with MRI
- Relatively High Capacity, Internalizing Sites.
- Mion-Transferrin
- Substrates For Enzymes.
- FDG
- High Capacity, Non-internalizing Binding Sites.
- A Gd complex of polyDTPA polyneogalactosyl
dextran. - Low Capacity, Non-internalizing Binding Sites.
- Gd antibodies targeted to solid tumors.
- Gd labeled antibodies targeted to endothelial
sites.
20In Vivo MR Imaging MR image of a mouse with TfR
and TfR- flank tumors
(a) The T1-weighted coronal SE image (3.5 min
0.3x0.3x3 mm3 resolution). TfR- tumors (right
arrowhead) and TfR tumors (left arrowhead) have
similar signal intensity. (b) Corresponding
T2-weighted gradient echo image showing
significant difference (8 min same resolution).
TfR-mediated cellular accumulation of the
superparamagnetic probe decreases signal
intensity as expected using T2- and T2-weighted
imaging pulse sequences on cellular
internalization. (c) Composite of a T1-weighted
spin echo image obtained for anatomic detail with
superimposed R2 changes after Tf-MION
administration displayed in a color map.
21Other Imaging Modalities for desialylated
glycoproteins binding to the high capacity (500
nM) hepatic binding protein
GdDTPA-galactosyl-Dextran
Post-injection 3.8 min Liver 66 Enhancement
22How can targeted imaging accelerate drug
discovery?
- William C Eckelman PhD
- Bethesda MD
23Definitions Molecular Imaging
- The term molecular imaging can be broadly defined
as the in vivo characterization and measurement
of biologic processes at the cellular and
molecular level. Weissleder Mahmood, Radiology
2001. - MI techniques directly or indirectly monitor and
record the spatiotemporal distribution of
molecular or cellular processes for biochemical,
biologic, diagnostic, or therapeutic applications
Thakur Lentle, Radiology 2005.
24Targeting ProteinsThe Magic Bullet
- Paul Ehrlich used the English expression magic
bullet for the first time in his Harben
Lectures. The German word Zauberkugel appears
earlier in his thoughts and publications, based
on his view of sidechains, the precursor of our
concept of receptors, and on the desirable
property of drugs that must not harm the host,
but attach the parasitic invader. - Royal Institute of Public Health (LondonLewis,
1908), Experimental Researches on Specific
therapy. On immunity with special references to
the relationship between distribution and action
of antigens, 107.
25The Magic Bullet
- Ehrlichs first magic bullet was Salvarsan or
arsphenamine, discovered in 1909, which provided
the only cure for syphilis. - Ehrlich also thought of attaching toxins to
antibodies whereby the antibody would carry the
deadly freight to the site of the invading
parasite. His idea lives on in the development of
immunotoxins.
26Both the lock and the key are necessary in
Targeted Imaging
- 99mTcDTPA or GdDTPA in GFR measurements is a key
without a specific target (lock). GFR is a
nontargeted process. - 18FFP-TZTP is a M2 muscarinic agonist, which is
transported non specifically across the BBB, but
binds specifically to the M2 receptor (the lock). - Doxorubicin in liposomes is not a targeted drug
although the therapeutic effect is increased by
improvement in liver tox profile.
Emil Fischer, 1894
27Imaging Molecular Targeting
- Interactions between a probe and a protein target
using pre-genomic techniques. - Biochemical probes such as iodide (50 years),
receptor binding radiotracers and monoclonal
antibodies (25 years) from autopsy, linkage and
drug efficacy, etc. - Interactions between a probe and a protein target
using post-genomic techniques. - Molecular biology, proteomics, genomics,
antisense, reporter genes, protein-protein
interactions. More targets (500 2000-3000) -
28Why is Targeted Imaging becoming more important
in Drug Development?
- As the pharmaceutical industry turns to targeted
drugs, targeted imaging is well positioned to
biomark the drug potential. - Target identification is dependent upon clinical
research, i.e., humanomics should be the study
of choice.
Lindsay MA. Finding new drug targets in the 21st
century. DDT 2005 23/24 1683.
29The Druggable genome
Nucl Horm R
Russ Lampel. The Druggable genone an update.
DDT 2005 23/24 1607.
30Measuring Targeting with Imaging for targets of
differing density
-
- In Vitro B/F Bmax/Ki
- Imaging requires B/F ratio 5, Drugs do not
31Measuring the In Vivo Binding Parameters of
18F-Fallypride in Monkeys Using a PET
Multiple-Injection Protocol.
Mukherjee 2005
32Measuring occupancywith Imaging for a
successful treatment
33Specific binding of 18FCyclofoxy was lower by
29 to 32 in Methadone Maintained Patients.
Normal Control
Methadone Maintained Patient
Thalamus 32Â Â 15 Amygdala 24Â
 30 Caudate 24  19 Ant. cingulate cortex
29Â Â 20
Kling et al., J Pharm Exp Therap, 295
1070-1076, 2000
34Measuring Occupancy with Imaging for
Multi-target drugs
- A single target drug with a multi-target
radiotracer. - A multi-target drug with a single target
radiotracer.
35M100907 as measured using 11CNMSP PET in humans
- Measure possible 5-HT2A receptor occupancy by
measuring frontal cortex to cerebellum ratio. - Measure possible D2 receptor occupancy by
measuring striatum to cerebellum ratio. - Is the Occupancy related to plasma concentration?
- Is the Occupancy time course related to plasma
concentration?
3611CNMSP Binding at 5-HT2A D2 receptors
37Schizophrenia and Antipsychotic Drugs
- M100907 (aka MDL 100907) is a potent and
selective 5-HT2A receptor antagonist, but does
not bind to the D2 receptor. - Therefore, it has the profile of an atypical
antipsychotic agent. - 11CNMSP can be used to monitor 5-HT2A and D2
receptor density changes.
J Clin Pharmacol Suppl 1999
38Sensitivity/Identifiabilityfor Drug Changes
- Measuring endogenous transmitter changes
39Measuring increased dopamine.22.3 (2.7) in
schizophrenia vs. 15.5 (1.8) in
controls.Schizophrenia is associated with
elevated amphetamine-induced synaptic dopamine.
Breier A, Su TP, Saunders R, Carson RE, Kolachana
BS, de Bartolomeis A, Weinberger DR, Weisenfeld
N, Malhotra AK, Eckelman WC, Pickar D. Proc Natl
Acad Sci U S A. 1997 Mar 1894(6)2569-74.
40Measuring increased acetylcholine. 18FFP-TZTP
as a probe for AChE inhibitors such as donepezil,
rivastigmine, tacrine. Increased ACh and 15
decrease of 18FFP-TZTP in Ctx.
Control
Physostigmine
Carson RE, Kiesewetter DO, Jagoda E, Der MG,
Herscovitch P, Eckelman WC. Muscarinic with
18FFP-TZTP control and competition studies. J
Cereb Blood Flow Metab. 1998 Oct18(10)1130-42.
41Individualized Medicine
42Current Individualized Medicine
- Metastatic pheochromocytoma (Pheo) can be
detected using 123IMIBG (or it that is not
available 131IMIBG can be used) prior to
therapy with 131IMIBG. - The mechanism of localization is based on the
neuroendocrine character of this disease with the
the norepinephrine transporter (NET) being the
key biochemical parameter. - Up to 73 of PHEO cells in vitro express
somatostatin receptors so patients with Pheo have
been assessed with somatostatin receptor imaging
(with either 123ITyr3-octreotide or
111InDTPA-octreotide). - Since the presence of NET and SSR appear to be
inversely related and dependent on cell
differentiation, imaging both pathways can be
instrumental in choosing therapy.
43Current Individualized Medicine
- The American College of Radiology has recently
set practice guidelines for 90Yibritumomab
tiuxetan (Zevalin) and 131Itositumomab
(Bexxar), which are approved by the FDA for
radioimmunotherapy of non-Hodgkins lymphoma. - Both antibodies are directed against the CD20
antigen, which is found on the surface of normal
and malignant B lymphocytes. - The preliminary imaging studies are to determine
dosimetry or assess biodistribution before the
radiotherapeutic is administered. The package
insert for these two radiotherapeutics has
guidelines for interpreting the imaging study and
these guidelines must be met before the therapy
can commence.
44Targeted Drugs Targeted Imaging
- Trastuzumab for HER2 (aka ErbB2 Neu)
- A cell surface glycoprotein with TK activity
- HER2 amplification/over-expression is predictive
for response in breast caner. - Overexpression became an entry criteria and
higher objective response was related to level of
overexpression. - Imaging study was developed with Ab fragment to
match the Ga-68 half life.
tra STUH zoo mab Herceptin
45Imaging HER2 Receptor in response to HSp90
Inhibitors
- 17-allylaminogeldanamycin (17-AAG) is the first
Hsp90 inhibitor to be tested in a clinical trial. - Induce proteasomal degradation of HER2 by binding
to Hsp90 chaperone protein. - Label the F(ab)2 of the anti-HER2 antibody
Herceptin with Ga-68.
Smith-Jones et al. Nat Biotech 2004
46MicroPET images (coronal) of mice with BT-474
tumors with Ga-68-DOTAcHF at 3 h before and 24 h
after 17-AAG
Tumor kidney
Taken from Smith-Jones et al. Imaging the
pharmacodynamics of HER2 degradation in response
to Hsp90 inhibitors. Nat Biotechnol.
200422701-6
47(No Transcript)
48Targeted Drugs
- Imatinib is an inhibitor of BCR-ABL TK.
- The Philadelphia chromosome and BCR-ABL have
prognostic significance for chronic myeloid
leukemia (CML). - Also, inhibits TK of the oncogene c-KIT in GIST.
- Imatinib-resistant mutants led to BMS 354825.
im MA ta nib Gleevec
49In Vivo ProteomicsFDG Before and after Gleevec
Taken from Demetri et al.
50Cancer is not a single gene disease, yet ..
- Imatinib (Gleevec)-effective in GIST and CML.
Mutants appeared, but further TK inhibitors have
high affinity for all mutants. - Trastuzumab (Herceptin)-best in high expressors
of HER2. - Gefitinib (Iressa)-EGFR TK.
- Shrinks tumor, but no change in survival in
NSCLC. Population specific. - Erlotinib (Tarceva) Cetuximab (Erbitux)-MAb
- Angiogenesis Inhibitors
DDT 200491042-1044
Golsteyn RM. DDT 2005 10(6)381.
51Drivers for Targeted Imaging
- Expansion of SPECT/CT complementing the continued
expansion of PET/CT. - Development of the parallel field of small animal
imaging. - The pharmaceutical companys need to increase
their success rate from 17 for established
targets and 3 for post-genomic targets. - The FDAs need to encourage biomarker
development, especially for human use.
52Magnitude of the opportunities
- Failures in Phase II or Phase III are often due
to newly identified toxicity or absence of
targeting. - 2000 drugs have failed to target sufficiently and
are accumulating at a rate of 150-200 per year.
Percentage of success
Arth CV CNS Inf Oncol Eye Metab
Uro Women ALL
Kola Landis Nat Rev DD 20043711-716
53Efficient Molecular Targeting Discovery
Development
- Streamlining drug discovery finding the right
drug against the right target to treat the right
disease. - For Targeted Imaging probes finding the right
molecular probe against the right target to
monitor the right disease.
54Molecular Probe Design
- Develop Molecular Imaging Probes that target a
protein that changes early in the disease. - Develop molecular tracers that are based on a
reductionist concept where the drug-organism
interplay can be reduced to a drug-target
interplay. - Collaborate with or join the Pharmaceutical
Industry
55Opportunities
- University Faculty
- Chemistry dept
- Pharmacology dept
- Radiology dept
- Radiopharmaceutical companies
- Pharmaceutical companies
- Drug development using imaging
56(No Transcript)
57Target-based drug discovery Is something wrong?
- Physiologic targets
- For example, blood pressure measurements in vivo
using potential drugs, e.g., the ACE inhibitors. - Targeted Drugs
- Gene Targets, e.g., single gene disease
- Mechanistic Targets (receptors, enzymes)
- Combitorial chemisty, HTS, rationale drug
discovery - Underestimation of the complexity of the
physiology and lack of relevant disease model. - Targeted Imaging could play a major role.
Sams-Dodd, DDT 200510139
58Other Imaging Modalities for desialylated
glycoproteins binding to the high capacity (500
nM) hepatic binding protein
GdDTPA-galactosyl-Dextran
Mattrey, Hall Vera UCSD
Post-injection 3.8 min Liver 66 Enhancement
59Comparison of HER2 status between primary tumor
and disseminated tumor cells in primary breast
cancer patients.
- RESULTS In 46 of 137 (34) breast cancer
patients, CK-positive cells were detectable in
BM. DTC with HER2 positivity were found in 20
(43) of these patients. - The HER2 expression on DTC was heterogeneous in 7
of 17 (41) patients. - Concordance rate of HER2 status between primary
tumor and DTC was 62. In 12 of 20 patients with
HER2 negative tumors HER2 positive DTC were
detected. - HER2 positive DTC can be detected in patients
with HER2 negative primary tumors.
Solomayer EF et al. Breast Cancer Res Treat. 2006
Mar 22 Epub ahead of print
60HER2-positive circulating tumor cells (CTC)
indicate poor clinical outcome in stage I to III
breast cancer patients.
- We detected one to eight CTCs in the peripheral
blood of 17 of 35 patients (48.6) presenting no
overt metastasis. - As a positive control, 7 of 7 (100) patients
with metastatic disease presented positive. - The presence and frequency of HER2-positive CTCs
correlated with a significantly decreased
disease-free survival (P lt 0.005) and overall
survival (P lt 0.05). - Interestingly, in 12 patients with HER2-positive
CTCs, the primary tumor was negative for HER2 as
assessed by immunohistochemical score and
fluorescence in situ hybridization. - This study provides some evidence of a prognostic
effect of HER2-positive CTCs in stage I to III
breast cancer.
Wulfing P et al. Clin Cancer Res. 2006 Mar
1512(6)1715-20.
61Predictive Factors for Outcome in a Phase II
Study of Gefitinib in Second-Line Treatment of
Advanced Esophageal Cancer Patients.
- Gefitinib has a modest activity in second-line
treatment of advanced esophageal cancer. - However, the patient outcome was significantly
better in female patients and in patients
demonstrating high EGFR expression or SCC
histology. - The selection of esophageal cancer patients for
future studies with EGFR-TKIs based on the level
of EGFR expression in their tumors or SCC
histology should be considered.
Janmaat ML et al. J Clin Oncol. 2006 Apr
124(10)1612-9.
62What makes a probe a targeted molecule?
- Does the probe bind to the target?
- If there are a limited number of sites, increased
mass should decrease probe binding. - Is the delivery dependent on flow, permeability,
or protein concentration? - What does flow dependence look like?
- What does permeability dependence look?
- Is the probe sensitive to target change?
63Epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitors in
cancer treatment.
- The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is a
cellular transmembrane receptor with tyrosine
kinase enzymatic activity which plays a key role
in human cancer. EGFR-dependent signaling is
involved in cancer cell proliferation, apoptosis,
angiogenesis, invasion and metastasis. - Cetuximab (Erbitux(R)), a chimeric human-mouse
monoclonal immunoglobin (Ig)G(1) antibody, which
blocks ligand binding and functional activation
of the EGFR, is currently registered in the USA,
Switzerland and the European Union for the
treatment of advanced, irinotecan-refractory
colorectal cancer. Gefitinib, (Iressa((R))), a
small molecule EGFR-selective inhibitor of
tyrosine kinase activity which blocks EGF
autophosphorylation and activation, has been the
first EGFR-targeting drug to be registered in 28
countries worldwide, including the USA, for the
third-line treatment of chemoresistant non-small
cell lung cancer patients.
Ciardiello F. Future Oncol. 2005
Apr1(2)221-234.
64Antiangiogenic cancer therapies get their act
together current developments and future
prospects of growth factor- and growth factor
receptor-targeted approaches
- The identification of surrogate markers that can
monitor the activity and efficacy of
antiangiogenic drugs in patients belongs to the
most critical challenges to exploit the full
potential of antiangiogenic therapies. The
opportunities and obstacles in further
development of growth factor- and growth factor
receptor-targeted antiangiogenic approaches for
advanced cancer, including malignant melanoma,
will be discussed herein with particular
reference to selected ongoing clinical trials.
Gille J. Exp Dermatol. 2006 Mar15(3)175-86.
65Triage for Breast Cancer