Home /Research /First-in-human Evaluation of a Prostate-specific Membrane Antigen–targeted Near-infrared Fluorescent Small Molecule for Fluorescence-based Identification of Prostate Cancer in Patients with High-risk Prostate Cancer Undergoing Robotic-assisted Prostatectomy
SURGICAL

First-in-human Evaluation of a Prostate-specific Membrane Antigen–targeted Near-infrared Fluorescent Small Molecule for Fluorescence-based Identification of Prostate Cancer in Patients with High-risk Prostate Cancer Undergoing Robotic-assisted Prostatectomy

Hao G. Nguyen, Nynke S. van den Berg, Alexander L. Antaris, Lingru Xue, Scott Greenberg, J. Walker Rosenthal, Anna Muchnik, Alwin Klaassen, Jeffry Simko, Sanjeev Dutta, Jonathan Sorger, Pamela N. Münster, Peter R. Carroll

Year
2023
Citations
35
Access
Open access

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Men with high-risk prostate cancer undergoing surgery likely recur due to failure to completely excise regional and/or local disease. OBJECTIVE: The first-in-human evaluation of safety, pharmacokinetics, and exploratory efficacy of IS-002, a novel near-infrared prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA)-targeted fluorescence imaging agent, designed for intraoperative prostate cancer visualization. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A phase 1, single-center, dose-escalation study was conducted in 24 men with high-risk prostate cancer scheduled for robotic-assisted radical prostatectomy with (extended) pelvic lymph node dissection using the da Vinci surgical system. OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS: Adverse events (AEs), vital signs, complete blood count, complete metabolic panel, urinalysis, and electrocardiogram were assessed over a 14-d period and compared with baseline. The pharmacokinetic profile of IS-002 was determined. Diagnostic accuracy was assessed for exploratory efficacy. RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS: and area under the curve increased with increasing dose. Plasma concentrations declined rapidly in a biphasic manner, with the median terminal half-lives ranging from 5.0 to 7.6 h, independent of dose and renal function. At 25 μg/kg, the exploratory efficacy readouts for the negative and positive predictive values were, 97% and 45% for lymph nodes, and 100% and 80% for residual/locoregional disease detection, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: IS-002 is safe and well tolerated, and has the potential to enable intraoperative tumor detection that could not be identified using standard imaging. PATIENT SUMMARY: IS-002 is a new imaging agent that specifically targets the prostate-specific membrane antigen receptor. In this study, we tested IS-002 for the first time in men with high-risk prostate cancer undergoing surgery and found that IS-002 is safe, is cleared from the body quickly, and potentially allows identification of prostate cancer in areas that would not be identified by conventional white light imaging.

Keywords

Prostate cancerMedicineProstatectomyUrologyProstate-specific antigenLymph nodeInternal medicineOncologyCancerPathology

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