4.7 Article

Imaging and photodynamic therapy of prostate cancer using a theranostic PSMA-targeting ligand

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00259-023-06224-1

Keywords

Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA); PSMA ligands; Prostate cancer; Photodynamic therapy (PDT); Theranostic agents; Intraoperative

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A new approach called PSMA-tPDT combining fluorescence-guided surgery and tumor-targeted photodynamic therapy (tPDT) has been developed to achieve complete resection of prostate cancer. In vitro and in vivo experiments showed that PSMA-tPDT significantly reduced cell viability, delayed tumor growth, and improved survival rate. Experiments on fresh human PCa tissue also demonstrated the effectiveness of PSMA-tPDT.
PurposeIncomplete resection of prostate cancer (PCa) results in increased risk of disease recurrence. Combined fluorescence-guided surgery with tumor-targeted photodynamic therapy (tPDT) may help to achieve complete tumor eradication. We developed a prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) ligand consisting of a DOTA chelator for In-111 labeling and a fluorophore/photosensitizer IRDye700DX (PSMA-N064). We evaluated the efficacy of PSMA-tPDT using PSMA-N064 in cell viability assays, a mouse xenograft model and in an ex vivo incubation study on fresh human PCa tissue.MethodsIn vitro, therapeutic efficacy of PSMA-N064 was evaluated using PSMA-positive LS174T cells and LS174T wild-type cells. In vivo, PSMA-N064-mediated tPDT was tested in immunodeficient BALB/c mice-bearing PSMA-positive LS174T xenografts. Tumor growth and survival were compared to control mice that received either NIR light or ligand injection only. Ex vivo tPDT efficacy was evaluated in excised fresh human PCa tissue incubated with PSMA-N064.ResultsIn vitro, tPDT led to a PSMA-specific light- and ligand dose-dependent loss in cell viability. In vivo, tPDT-induced tumor cell apoptosis, delayed tumor growth, and significantly improved survival (p = 0.004) of the treated PSMA-positive tumor-bearing mice compared with the controls. In fresh ex vivo human PCa tissue, apoptosis was significantly increased in PSMA-tPDT-treated samples compared to non-treated control samples (p = 0.037).ConclusionThis study showed the feasibility of PSMA-N064-mediated tPDT in cell assays, a xenograft model and excised fresh human PCa tissue. This paves the way to investigate the impact of in vivo PSMA-tPDT on surgical outcome in PCa patients.

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