Investigator

Atsushi B. Tsuji

Group leader · National Institutes for Quantum Science and Technology, Department of Molecular Imaging and Theranostics

Research Interests

ABTAtsushi B. Tsuji
Papers(1)
Radiotheranostic Agen…
Collaborators(4)
Didier BoturynPascal DumySatoshi ObaraZhao-Hui Jin
Institutions(3)
National Institutes F…Department of Molecul…Ecole Nationale Supér…

Papers

Radiotheranostic Agent 64Cu-cyclam-RAFT-c(-RGDfK-)4 for Management of Peritoneal Metastasis in Ovarian Cancer

Abstract Purpose: Ovarian cancer peritoneal metastases (OCPMs) are a pathophysiologically heterogeneous group of tumors that are rarely curable. αVβ3 integrin (αVβ3) is overexpressed on tumoral neovessels and frequently on ovarian cancer cells. Here, using two clinically relevant αVβ3-positive OCPM mouse models, we studied the theranostic potential of an αVβ3-specific radiopeptide, 64Cu-cyclam-RAFT-c(-RGDfK-)4 (64Cu-RaftRGD), and its intra- and intertumoral distribution in relation to the tumor microenvironment. Experimental Design: αVβ3-expressing peritoneal and subcutaneous models of ovarian carcinoma (IGR-OV1 and NIH:OVCAR-3) were established in nude mice. 64Cu-RaftRGD was administered either intravenously or intraperitoneally. We performed intratumoral distribution (ITD) studies, PET/CT imaging and quantification, biodistribution assay and radiation dosimetry, and therapeutic efficacy and toxicity studies. Results: Intraperitoneal administration was an efficient route for targeting 64Cu-RaftRGD to OCPMs with excellent tumor penetration. Using the fluorescence surrogate, Cy5.5-RaftRGD, in our unique high-resolution multifluorescence analysis, we found that the ITD of 64Cu-RaftRGD was spatially distinct from, but complementary to, that of hypoxia. 64Cu-RaftRGD–based PET enabled clear visualization of multiple OCPM deposits and ascites and biodistribution analysis demonstrated an inverse correlation between tumor uptake and tumor size (1.2–17.2 mm). 64Cu-RaftRGD at a radiotherapeutic dose (148 MBq/0.357 nmol) showed antitumor activities by inhibiting tumor cell proliferation and inducing apoptosis, with negligible toxicity. Conclusions: Collectively, these results demonstrate the all-in-one potential of 64Cu-RaftRGD for imaging guided radiotherapy of OCPM by targeting both tumoral neovessels and cancerous cells. On the basis of the ITD finding, we propose that pairing αVβ3- and hypoxia-targeted radiotherapies could improve therapeutic efficacy by overcoming the heterogeneity of ITD encountered with single-agent treatments.

121Works
1Papers
4Collaborators
Cell Line, TumorNeoplasmsDisease Models, AnimalPancreatic NeoplasmsApoptosisTumor Cells, CulturedBone Neoplasms

Positions

2021–

Group leader

National Institutes for Quantum Science and Technology · Department of Molecular Imaging and Theranostics

2016–

Group leader

National Institutes for Quantum and Radiological Science and Technology · Department of Molecular Imaging and Theranostics

2001–

Researcher

National Institute of Radiological Sciences

1998–

Researcher

Hamamatsu University School of Medicine

1997–

Researcher

Otsuka Pharmaceutical

Education

Nagoya University

Country

JP

Keywords
Nuclear MedicineGenetics