PLoS Medicine (Mar 2005)

Noninvasive visualization of the activated alphavbeta3 integrin in cancer patients by positron emission tomography and [18F]Galacto-RGD.

  • Roland Haubner,
  • Wolfgang A Weber,
  • Ambros J Beer,
  • Eugenija Vabuliene,
  • Daniel Reim,
  • Mario Sarbia,
  • Karl-Friedrich Becker,
  • Michael Goebel,
  • Rüdiger Hein,
  • Hans-Jürgen Wester,
  • Horst Kessler,
  • Markus Schwaiger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0020070
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
p. e70

Abstract

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BACKGROUND: The integrin alphavbeta3 plays an important role in angiogenesis and tumor cell metastasis, and is currently being evaluated as a target for new therapeutic approaches. Several techniques are being studied to enable noninvasive determination of alphavbeta3 expression. We developed [(18)F]Galacto-RGD, a (18)F-labeled glycosylated alphavbeta3 antagonist, allowing monitoring of alphavbeta3 expression with positron emission tomography (PET). METHODS AND FINDINGS: Here we show by quantitative analysis of images resulting from a small-animal PET scanner that uptake of [(18)F]Galacto-RGD in the tumor correlates with alphavbeta3 expression subsequently determined by Western blot analyses. Moreover, using the A431 human squamous cell carcinoma model we demonstrate that this approach is sensitive enough to visualize alphavbeta3 expression resulting exclusively from the tumor vasculature. Most important, this study shows, that [(18)F]Galacto-RGD with PET enables noninvasive quantitative assessment of the alphavbeta3 expression pattern on tumor and endothelial cells in patients with malignant tumors. CONCLUSIONS: Molecular imaging with [(18)F]Galacto-RGD and PET can provide important information for planning and monitoring anti-angiogenic therapies targeting the alphavbeta3 integrins and can reveal the involvement and role of this integrin in metastatic and angiogenic processes in various diseases.