2016
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aad0293
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A mouse-human phase 1 co-clinical trial of a protease-activated fluorescent probe for imaging cancer

Abstract: Local recurrence is a common cause of treatment failure for patients with solid tumors. Intraoperative detection of microscopic residual cancer in the tumor bed could be used to decrease the risk of a positive surgical margin, reduce rates of reexcision, and tailor adjuvant therapy. We used a protease-activated fluorescent imaging probe, LUM015, to detect cancer in vivo in a mouse model of soft tissue sarcoma (STS) and ex vivo in a first-in-human phase 1 clinical trial. In mice, intravenous injection of LUM015… Show more

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Cited by 240 publications
(190 citation statements)
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“…Several approaches have been used showcasing the potential of fluorescence imaging in humans, varying from single-dose to dose-escalation designs differing from our microdosing approach. In particular, the ex vivo validation steps for visualization of tumor microdistribution of the NIR fluorescent tracer and its relationship to histologic immunohistochemical parameters provides a framework that was not reported earlier in previous clinical studies in, for example, fluorescein-conjugated CEA-targeted imaging in colorectal cancer (25), folate receptor-a imaging in ovarian cancer (26), the study of Rosenthal and colleagues using cetuximab-IRDye800CW in head and neck cancer (29), and a protease-activatable probe in soft tissue sarcoma and breast cancer (30). Therefore, the impact of our study is that it provides the necessary framework of evaluation and reporting of future clinical studies of fluorescence image-guided surgery.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Several approaches have been used showcasing the potential of fluorescence imaging in humans, varying from single-dose to dose-escalation designs differing from our microdosing approach. In particular, the ex vivo validation steps for visualization of tumor microdistribution of the NIR fluorescent tracer and its relationship to histologic immunohistochemical parameters provides a framework that was not reported earlier in previous clinical studies in, for example, fluorescein-conjugated CEA-targeted imaging in colorectal cancer (25), folate receptor-a imaging in ovarian cancer (26), the study of Rosenthal and colleagues using cetuximab-IRDye800CW in head and neck cancer (29), and a protease-activatable probe in soft tissue sarcoma and breast cancer (30). Therefore, the impact of our study is that it provides the necessary framework of evaluation and reporting of future clinical studies of fluorescence image-guided surgery.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More recently, Burggraaf and colleagues demonstrated c-met-targeted endoscopy fluorescence imaging in humans using a fluorescent dye of 650 nm (28), whereas Rosenthal and colleagues have demonstrated the feasibility of using the therapeutic mAb cetuximab targeting EGFR as the targeting moiety of an NIRF tracer in patients with head and neck cancer (29). In addition, the clinical application of a proteaseactivatable tracer has been reported in patients with soft tissue sarcoma and breast cancer (30).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With tumor-specific probes, breast tumor specimens can be detected, dissected, and then intraoperatively evaluated by image-guided approaches. 6 The applicability of intraoperative tumor-specific fluorescence imaging for real-time tumor visualization was successfully demonstrated in a first-inhuman analysis in breast cancer. 1 Studies in mice have demonstrated that residual fluorescence in the tumor margins correlates with local recurrence, whereas image-guided surgery improved outcomes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Clinical trials have recently begun using LUM015, a protease-activated fluorescent molecule, constituting the first in-human phase 1 clinical trial of this type of imaging probe (36). The activation of LUM015 relies on cathepsin proteases, enzymes commonly overexpressed by tumors (37).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…LUM015 is optically inactive under normal conditions, but upon proteolytic cleavage by specific cathepsins, a covalently attached quencher molecule is released and fluorescence signal greatly intensifies (36). LUM015 was injected intravenously into 15 patients with either invasive ductal carcinoma or soft tissue sarcoma and was well tolerated with no adverse pharmacological activity (36).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%