PET, image-guided HDAC inhibition of pediatric diffuse midline glioma improves survival in murine models

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Abstract

Efforts at altering the dismal prognosis of pediatric midline gliomas focus on direct delivery strategies like convection-enhanced delivery (CED), where a cannula is implanted into tumor. Successful CED treatments require confirmation of tumor coverage, dosimetry, and longitudinal in vivo pharmacokinetic monitoring. These properties would be best determined clinically with image-guided dosimetry using theranostic agents. In this study, we combine CED with novel, molecular-grade positron emission tomography (PET) imaging and show how PETobinostat, a novel PET-imageable HDAC inhibitor, is effective against DIPG models. PET data reveal that CED has significant mouse-to-mouse variability; imaging is used to modulate CED infusions to maximize tumor saturation. The use of PET-guided CED results in survival prolongation in mouse models; imaging shows the need of CED to achieve high brain concentrations. This work demonstrates how personalized image-guided drug delivery may be useful in potentiating CED-based treatment algorithms and supports a foundation for clinical translation of PETobinostat.

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Tosi, U., Kommidi, H., Adeuyan, O., Guo, H., Maachani, U. B., Chen, N., … Souweidane, M. M. (2020). PET, image-guided HDAC inhibition of pediatric diffuse midline glioma improves survival in murine models. Science Advances, 6(30). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abb4105

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