Although in smaller prostate cancer xenografts both radionuclides seemed to be equally effective after prostate-specific antigen promoter-mediated NIS gene delivery, a superior therapeutic effect has been demonstrated for (188)Re in larger tumors.
Due to limited treatment options the prognosis of patients with advanced hepatocellular cancer (HCC) has remained poor. To investigate an alternative therapeutic approach, we examined the feasibility of radioiodine therapy of HCC following human sodium iodide symporter (NIS) gene transfer using a mouse a-fetoprotein (AFP) promoter construct to target NIS expression to HCC cells. For this purpose, the murine Hepa 1-6 and the human HepG2 hepatoma cell lines were stably transfected with NIS cDNA under the control of the tumor-specific AFP promoter. The stably transfected Hepa 1-6 cell line showed a 10-fold increase in iodide accumulation, while HepG2 cells accumulated 125 I approximately 60-fold. Tumor-specific NIS expression was confirmed on mRNA level by northern blot analysis, and on protein level by immunostaining, that revealed primarily membrane-associated NIS-specific immunoreactivity.In an in vitro clonogenic assay up to 78% of NIS-transfected Hepa 1-6 and 93% of HepG2 cells were killed by
A significant therapeutic effect of (211)At has been demonstrated in prostate cancer after PSA promoter-directed NIS gene transfer in vitro and in vivo suggesting a potential role for (211)At as an attractive alternative radioisotope for NIS-targeted radionuclide therapy, in particular in smaller tumors with limited radionuclide retention time.
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