Upper gastrointestinal (GI) cancers are a major health problem in Canada. At the metastatic stage, options are limited (usually chemotherapy, immunotherapy, personalized therapies under research protocols). These options are not applicable to all patients and may have significant toxicities. Endoradiotherapy (ERT) using a radioisotope coupled with a localization vector specifically targeting tumor cells to deliver a localized dose of radiation therapy is a promising avenue as it can treat disseminated neoplastic disease in a specific manner sparing healthy tissue with minimal side effects. The main goal of this study is to confirm that patients with upper GI cancer would be eligible for ERT (177Lu-PSMA treatment by using 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT assessment).
Background: Upper gastrointestinal (GI) cancers are a major health problem in Canada. At the metastatic stage, options are limited (usually chemotherapy, immunotherapy, personalized therapies under research protocols). These options are not applicable to all patients and may have significant toxicities. Endoradiotherapy (ERT) using a radioisotope coupled with a localization vector specifically targeting tumor cells to deliver a localized dose of radiation therapy is a promising avenue as it can treat disseminated neoplastic disease in a specific manner sparing healthy tissue with minimal side effects. 177Lu-PSMA would be a potentially usable ERT agent for upper GI cancers. Initially developed for prostate cancer, for which it has been successfully proven, it targets the PSMA protein found on tumor cells or their microenvironment. Its localization is usually confirmed by imaging with 68Ga-PSMA, which is the other component of its theranostic pair. There are many case reports showing significant accumulation of 68Ga-PSMA in upper GI cancers, but there are no prospective studies to determine with certainty whether these are isolated cases or whether these tumors consistently uptake this agent; the same uptake that determines whether 177Lu-PSMA ERT has potential efficacy for these patients. We believe that 177Lu-PSMA ERT could provide an effective radiation dose to treat metastatic high-grade GI cancers without exceeding acceptable dose limits to healthy tissue, providing a new therapeutic avenue for this patient group. Objective: 1. To confirm that patients with upper gastric cancers would be eligible for 177Lu-PSMA treatment by using 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT assessment, according to the criteria suggested by the European Association of Nuclear Medicine (EANM) (tumor uptake 1.5 times higher than the liver) 2. Determine tumor heterogeneity (proportion of tumor lesions identified by computed tomography (CT) that capture 68Ga-PSMA) in each patient; 3. Determine the proportion of patients with lesions that do not accumulate 68Ga-PSMA; 4. Calculate the pharmacokinetics of 68Ga-PSMA by serial PET imaging; 5. Calculate dosimetry of healthy and tumor tissues; Study population: Adults with upper metastatic gastric cancer (adenocarcinomas of the esophagus, stomach, bile ducts and pancreas) Procedure and Follow-up: Patient will undergo 68Ga-PSMA PET imaging at different post-injection times (total visit duration of approximately half a day). Clinical data will be collected from this imaging and from the participant's medical record (demographic, treatment, medication, pathology, lab test results) for a 2-year follow-up period.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
20
Injection of 68Ga-PSMA followed by 3 PET/CT acquisitions
CIUSSS de l'Estrie- CHUS Hospital
Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada
RECRUITINGTumor uptake of 68Ga-PSMA
Proportion of participants with tumor uptake equal to or greater than 1.5 times the mean hepatic uptake (SUVmean) on 68Ga-PSMA PET according to the criteria suggested by the European Association of Nuclear Medicine (EANM)
Time frame: At 1 hour post-injection acquisition
Tumor heterogeneity
Proportion of tumor lesions identified on CT that accumulate 68Ga-PSMA in each participant
Time frame: At 1 hour post-injection acquisition
Tumor lesions that do not accumulate 68Ga-PSMA
Proportion of patients with CT-identified tumor lesions that do not accumulate 68Ga-PSMA
Time frame: At 1 hour post-injection acquisition
Effective half-life of 68Ga-PSMA
Comparison of uptakes of 68Ga-PSMA in tumor lesions and healthy tissue at each time points
Time frame: At 30 minutes, 60 minutes and, 120 minutes post-injection
Radiation dose (mGy)
Estimated radiation dose (mGy) delivered to healthy and tumor tissues from 177Lu-PSMA extrapolated from 68Ga-PSMA results
Time frame: At 30 minutes, 60 minutes and120 minutes post-injection
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