4.7 Article

Preclinical Evaluation of 3-18F-Fluoro-2,2-Dimethylpropionic Acid as an Imaging Agent for Tumor Detection

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
Volume 55, Issue 9, Pages 1506-1512

Publisher

SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC
DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.114.140343

Keywords

tumor detection; PET; FPIA; FDG; lipid metabolism

Funding

  1. Cancer Research U.K. Discovery award [C11589/A13222]
  2. MRC [MR/J007986/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  3. Cancer Research UK [16584, 12011, 10337, 18278] Funding Source: researchfish
  4. Medical Research Council [MR/J007986/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  5. National Institute for Health Research [NIHR/CS/009/009] Funding Source: researchfish

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Deregulated cellular metabolism is a hallmark of many cancers. In addition to increased glycolytic flux, exploited for cancer imaging with F-18-FDG, tumor cells display aberrant lipid metabolism. Pivalic acid is a short-chain, branched carboxylic acid used to increase oral bioavailability of prodrugs. After prodrug hydrolysis, pivalic acid undergoes intracellular metabolism via the fatty acid oxidation pathway. We have designed a new probe, 3-F-18-fluoro-2,2-dimethylpropionic acid, also called F-18-fluoro-pivalic acid (F-18-FPIA), for the imaging of aberrant lipid metabolism and cancer detection. Methods: Cell intrinsic uptake of F-18-FPIA was measured in murine EMT6 breast adenocarcinoma cells. In vivo dynamic imaging, time course bio-distribution, and radiotracer stability testing were performed. F-18-FPIA tumor retention was further compared in vivo to F-18-FDG uptake in several xenograft models and inflammatory tissue. Results: F-18-FPIA rapidly accumulated in EMT6 breast cancer cells, with retention of intracellular radioactivity predicted to occur via a putative F-18-FPIA carnitine-ester. The radiotracer was metabolically stable to degradation in mice. In vivo imaging of implanted EMT6 murine and BT474 human breast adenocarcinoma cells by F-18-FPIA PET showed rapid and extensive tumor localization, reaching 9.1% +/- 0.5% and 7.6% +/- 1.2% injected dose/g, respectively, at 60 min after injection. Substantial uptake in the cortex of the kidney was seen, with clearance primarily via urinary excretion. Regarding diagnostic utility, uptake of F-18-FPIA was comparable to that of F-18-FDG in EMT6 tumors but superior in the DU145 human prostate cancer model (54% higher uptake; P = 0.002). Furthermore, compared with F-18-FDG, F-18-FPIA had lower normal-brain uptake resulting in a superior tumor-to-brain ratio (2.5 vs. 1.3 in subcutaneously implanted U87 human glioma tumors; P = 0.001), predicting higher contrast for brain cancer imaging. Both radiotracers showed increased localization in inflammatory tissue. Conclusion: F-18-FPIA shows promise as an imaging agent for cancer detection and warrants further investigation.

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