Pharmaceuticals (Jul 2023)

Image-Based Dosimetry in Dogs and Cross-Reactivity with Human Tissues of IGF2R-Targeting Human Antibody

  • Kevin J. H. Allen,
  • Ohyun Kwon,
  • Matthew R. Hutcheson,
  • Joseph J. Grudzinski,
  • Stuart M. Cain,
  • Frederic A. Cruz,
  • Remitha M. Vinayakamoorthy,
  • Ying S. Sun,
  • Lindsay Fairley,
  • Chandra B. Prabaharan,
  • Ryan Dickinson,
  • Valerie MacDonald-Dickinson,
  • Maruti Uppalapati,
  • Bryan P. Bednarz,
  • Ekaterina Dadachova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ph16070979
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 7
p. 979

Abstract

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Background: Osteosarcoma (OS) represents the most common primary bone tumor in humans and in companion dogs, being practically phenotypically identical. There is a need for effective treatments to extend the survival of patients with OS. Here, we examine the dosimetry in beagle dogs and cross-reactivity with human tissues of a novel human antibody, IF3, that targets the insulin growth factor receptor type 2 (IGF2R), which is overexpressed on OS cells, making it a candidate for radioimmunotherapy of OS. Methods: [89Zr]Zr-DFO-IF3 was injected into three healthy beagle dogs. PET/CT was conducted at 4, 24, 48, and 72 h. RAPID analysis was used to determine the dosimetry of [177Lu]Lu-CHXA”-IF3 for a clinical trial in companion dogs with OS. IF3 antibody was biotinylated, and a multitude of human tissues were assessed with immunohistochemistry. Results: PET/CT revealed that only the liver, bone marrow, and adrenal glands had high uptake. Clearance was initially through renal and hepatobiliary excretion in the first 72 h followed by primarily physical decay. RAPID analysis showed bone marrow to be the dose-limiting organ with a therapeutic range for 177Lu calculated to be 0.487–0.583 GBq. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated the absence of IGF2R expression on the surface of healthy human cells, thus suggesting that radioimmunotherapy with [177Lu]Lu-CHXA”-IF3 will be well tolerated. Conclusions: Image-based dosimetry has defined a safe therapeutic range for canine clinical trials, while immunohistochemistry has suggested that the antibody will not cross-react with healthy human tissues.

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