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Targeting iron metabolism in high-grade glioma with 68Ga-citrate PET/MR
Spencer C. Behr, … , Susan M. Chang, Michael J. Evans
Spencer C. Behr, … , Susan M. Chang, Michael J. Evans
Published November 2, 2018
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2018;3(21):e93999. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.93999.
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Clinical Research and Public Health Neuroscience Oncology

Targeting iron metabolism in high-grade glioma with 68Ga-citrate PET/MR

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Abstract

Noninvasive tools that target tumor cells could improve the management of glioma. Cancer generally has a high demand for Fe(III), an essential nutrient for a variety of biochemical processes. We tested whether 68Ga-citrate, an Fe(III) biomimetic that binds to apo-transferrin in blood, detects glioma in preclinical models and patients using hybrid PET/MRI. Mouse PET/CT studies showed that 68Ga-citrate accumulates in subcutaneous U87MG xenografts in a transferrin receptor–dependent fashion within 4 hours after injection. Seventeen patients with WHO grade III or IV glioma received 3.7–10.2 mCi 68Ga-citrate and were imaged with PET/MR 123–307 minutes after injection to establish that the radiotracer can localize to human tumors. Multiple contrast-enhancing lesions were PET avid, and tumor to adjacent normal white matter ratios were consistently greater than 10:1. Several contrast-enhancing lesions were not PET avid. One minimally enhancing lesion and another tumor with significantly reduced enhancement following bevacizumab therapy were PET avid. Advanced MR imaging analysis of one patient with contrast-enhancing glioblastoma showed that metabolic hallmarks of viable tumor spatially overlaid with 68Ga-citrate accumulation. These early data underscore that high-grade glioma may be detectable with a radiotracer that targets Fe(III) transport.

Authors

Spencer C. Behr, Javier E. Villanueva-Meyer, Yan Li, Yung-Hua Wang, Junnian Wei, Anna Moroz, Julia K.L. Lee, Jeffrey C. Hsiao, Kenneth T. Gao, Wendy Ma, Soonmee Cha, David M. Wilson, Youngho Seo, Sarah J. Nelson, Susan M. Chang, Michael J. Evans

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Figure 2

Post-contrast T1-weighted MR and fused 68Ga-citrate PET/MR images in 3 different patients with high-grade glioma.

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Post-contrast T1-weighted MR and fused 68Ga-citrate PET/MR images in 3 d...
Representative post-contrast T1-weighted MR (A, C, and E) and fused PET/MR (B, D, and F) images are shown. (A and B) 38-year-old woman with glioblastoma: PET/MR images acquired 300 minutes after injection of 6.9 mCi (255.3 MBq) 68Ga-citrate show focal radiotracer uptake (SUVmax, 2.7) corresponding to the enhancing left frontal mass (white arrows). (C and D) 62-year-old woman with recurrent glioblastoma: PET/MR images acquired 260 minutes after injection of 10 mCi (370 MBq) 68Ga-citrate show focal radiotracer uptake (SUVmax, 2.7) corresponding to an enhancing mass along the resection bed (white arrows). (E and F) 32-year-old man with glioblastoma: PET images acquired 264 minutes after injection of 3.5 mCi (129.5 MBq) 68Ga-citrate show uptake in the two enhancing lesion in the left thalamus (SUVmax, 3.5) and left caudate head (SUVmax, 2.9, white arrows).

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