4.6 Review

Radiotheranostics in oncology: current challenges and emerging opportunities

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS CLINICAL ONCOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 8, Pages 534-550

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41571-022-00652-y

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Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R35 CA232130, P30 CA008748]
  2. NHMRC [1177837]

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Radiotheranostics, combining molecular imaging with targeted radionuclide therapy, has great potential and faces various challenges. It offers a huge opportunity in oncology to improve treatment outcomes and minimize side effects.
Radiotheranostics enables the clinician to image and then target lesions using the same probe. Despite this appealing potential, interest in the field of radiotheranostics has long been constrained by a lack of expertise, high infrastructure costs and the availability of non-radioactive alternative approaches. Nonetheless, several recent successes have led to renewed research interest. In this Review, the authors summarize the current challenges and opportunities in this rapidly emerging area. Structural imaging remains an essential component of diagnosis, staging and response assessment in patients with cancer; however, as clinicians increasingly seek to noninvasively investigate tumour phenotypes and evaluate functional and molecular responses to therapy, theranostics - the combination of diagnostic imaging with targeted therapy - is becoming more widely implemented. The field of radiotheranostics, which is the focus of this Review, combines molecular imaging (primarily PET and SPECT) with targeted radionuclide therapy, which involves the use of small molecules, peptides and/or antibodies as carriers for therapeutic radionuclides, typically those emitting alpha-, beta- or auger-radiation. The exponential, global expansion of radiotheranostics in oncology stems from its potential to target and eliminate tumour cells with minimal adverse effects, owing to a mechanism of action that differs distinctly from that of most other systemic therapies. Currently, an enormous opportunity exists to expand the number of patients who can benefit from this technology, to address the urgent needs of many thousands of patients across the world. In this Review, we describe the clinical experience with established radiotheranostics as well as novel areas of research and various barriers to progress.

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