There are similarities between (99m)Tc ECDG uptake and (18)F FDG uptake in tumors, and study findings supported the potential use of (99m)Tc ECDG as a functional imaging agent.
Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) plays an important role in angiogenesis and cancer progression. Since many tumor cells exhibit COX-2 expression, functional imaging of COX-2 expression using celebrex (CBX, a COX-2 inhibitor) may provide not only a non-invasive, reproducible, quantifiable alternative to biopsies, but it also greatly complements pharmacokinetic studies by correlating clinical responses with biological effects. Moreover, molecular endpoints of anti-COX-2 therapy could also be assessed effectively. This study aimed at measuring uptake of Tc-EC-CBX in COX-2 expression in tumor-bearing animal models. In vitro Western blot analysis and cellular uptake assays were used to examine the feasibility of using Tc-EC-CBX to measure COX-2 activity. Tissue distribution studies of Tc-EC-CBX were evaluated in tumor-bearing rodents at 0.5-4 h. Dosimetric absorption was then estimated. Planar scintigraphy was performed in mice, rats and rabbits bearing tumors. In vitro cellular uptake indicated that cells with higher COX-2 expression (A549 and 13762) had higher uptake of Tc-EC-CBX than lower COX-2 expression (H226). In vivo biodistribution of Tc-EC-CBX in tumor-bearing rodents showed increased tumor:tissue ratios as a function of time. In vitro and biodistribution studies demonstrated the possibility of using Tc-EC-CBX to assess COX-2 expression. Planar images confirmed that the tumors could be visualized with Tc-EC-CBX from 0.5 to 4 h in tumor-bearing animal models. We conclude that Tc-EC-CBX may be useful to assess tumor COX-2 expression. This may be useful in the future for selecting patients for treatment with anti-COX-2 agents.
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