Tumor Targeting of 211At-Labeled Antibody under Sodium Ascorbate Protection against Radiolysis

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Abstract

Astatine-211 (211At) is an alpha emitter applicable to radioimmunotherapy (RIT), a cancer treatment that utilizes radioactive antibodies to target tumors. In the preparation of 211At-labeled monoclonal antibodies (211At-mAbs), the possibility of radionuclide-induced antibody denaturation (radiolysis) is of concern. Our previous study showed that this 211At-induced radiochemical reaction disrupts the cellular binding activity of an astatinated mAb, resulting in attenuation of in vivo antitumor effects, whereas sodium ascorbate (SA), a free radical scavenger, prevents antibody denaturation, contributing to the maintenance of binding and antitumor activity. However, the influence of antibody denaturation on the pharmacokinetics of 211At-mAbs relating to tumor accumulation, blood circulation time, and distribution to normal organs remains unclear. In this study, we use a radioactive anti-human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (anti-HER2) mAb to demonstrate that an 211At-induced radiochemical reaction disrupts active targeting via an antigen-antibody interaction, whereas SA helps to maintain targeting. In contrast, there was no difference in blood circulation time as well as distribution to normal organs between the stabilized and denatured immunoconjugates, indicating that antibody denaturation may not affect tumor accumulation via passive targeting based on the enhanced permeability and retention effect. In a high-HER2-expressing xenograft model treated with 1 MBq of 211At-anti-HER2 mAbs, SA-dependent maintenance of active targeting contributed to a significantly better response. In treatment with 0.5 or 0.2 MBq, the stabilized radioactive mAb significantly reduced tumor growth compared to the denatured immunoconjugate. Additionally, through a comparison between a stabilized 211At-anti-HER2 mAb and radioactive nontargeted control mAb, we demonstrate that active targeting significantly enhances tumor accumulation of radioactivity and in vivo antitumor effect. In RIT with 211At, active targeting contributes to efficient tumor accumulation of radioactivity, resulting in a potent antitumor effect. SA-dependent protection that successfully maintains tumor targeting will facilitate the clinical application of alpha-RIT.

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Takashima, H., Ohnuki, K., Manabe, S., Koga, Y., Tsumura, R., Anzai, T., … Yasunaga, M. (2023). Tumor Targeting of 211At-Labeled Antibody under Sodium Ascorbate Protection against Radiolysis. Molecular Pharmaceutics, 20(2), 1156–1167. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.2c00869

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