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Theranostics and Clinical Trials for GI Cancers
Transcript
- 00:00 --> 00:03Funding for Yale Cancer Answers is
- 00:03 --> 00:06provided by Smilow Cancer Hospital.
- 00:06 --> 00:08Welcome to Yale Cancer Answers
- 00:08 --> 00:10with Doctor Anees Chagpar.
- 00:10 --> 00:11Yale Cancer Answers features the
- 00:11 --> 00:13latest information on cancer care
- 00:13 --> 00:14by welcoming oncologists and
- 00:14 --> 00:17specialists who are on the forefront
- 00:17 --> 00:18of the battle to fight cancer.
- 00:18 --> 00:21This week it's a conversation about
- 00:21 --> 00:23theranostics and clinical trials for GI
- 00:23 --> 00:25cancers with Doctor Gabriella Spilberg.
- 00:25 --> 00:27Dr. Spilberg is an assistant professor
- 00:27 --> 00:29of radiology and biomedical imaging
- 00:29 --> 00:31at the Yale School of Medicine,
- 00:31 --> 00:33where Doctor Chagpar is a professor
- 00:33 --> 00:34of surgical oncology.
- 00:35 --> 00:38Gabriella, maybe we can start off by
- 00:38 --> 00:40you telling us a little bit more about
- 00:40 --> 00:44yourself and what it is you do.
- 00:44 --> 00:47I started nuclear medicine basically
- 00:47 --> 00:50in about 2018 when I went to
- 00:50 --> 00:53train at Dana Farber in Boston,
- 00:53 --> 00:57and I didn't know much about it when I first
- 00:57 --> 01:01got in contact with this interesting field.
- 01:01 --> 01:05I'm originally from Brazil, and I trained
- 01:05 --> 01:08previously in Brazil and in Brazil
- 01:08 --> 01:12this was not something that was
- 01:12 --> 01:15widely available or
- 01:15 --> 01:17in practice back then,
- 01:17 --> 01:20so when I came here and I first
- 01:20 --> 01:23encountered this field where you were not
- 01:23 --> 01:26really looking at anatomic structures,
- 01:26 --> 01:29but you were looking at molecular processes
- 01:29 --> 01:33and what was happening at the cellular level,
- 01:33 --> 01:34that really intrigued me.
- 01:34 --> 01:38And it really changed how you see
- 01:38 --> 01:41imaging and everything around imaging.
- 01:41 --> 01:47And then back in 2018 was about when
- 01:47 --> 01:49one of the big drugs for a neuroendocrine
- 01:49 --> 01:51cancer was approved.
- 01:55 --> 01:58When you see that things are
- 01:58 --> 02:02not really just a visual structure
- 02:02 --> 02:05but you can see what's happening,
- 02:05 --> 02:09it just changed my whole conception about
- 02:09 --> 02:13what imaging could be and what was happening.
- 02:13 --> 02:17So that's what got me so interested.
- 02:17 --> 02:21When I decided that there
- 02:21 --> 02:24was not really a step back into this
- 02:24 --> 02:27field because this was just the next
- 02:27 --> 02:30level and what the future will be,
- 02:30 --> 02:32it was very clear to me that
- 02:32 --> 02:33this was my path.
- 02:33 --> 02:37So I stayed at Dana Farber for about
- 02:37 --> 02:41two years and that's when I really
- 02:41 --> 02:45had a very extensive experience and
- 02:45 --> 02:48deep dive into what was happening
- 02:48 --> 02:51and how these things were done.
- 02:54 --> 02:59Basically this is when I acquired
- 02:59 --> 03:02my foundational knowledge.
- 03:03 --> 03:06Maybe we can take a step back.
- 03:06 --> 03:08I mean it sounds like this
- 03:08 --> 03:11is very futuristic,
- 03:11 --> 03:13forward-looking career path,
- 03:13 --> 03:16but for our audience,
- 03:16 --> 03:18maybe you can tell us a
- 03:18 --> 03:20little bit more about what
- 03:20 --> 03:22exactly is theranostics?
- 03:22 --> 03:25Theranostics is when you take an
- 03:25 --> 03:30agent which has a specific target.
- 03:30 --> 03:33So let's say for neuroendocrine
- 03:33 --> 03:36cancers you're looking to somatostatin
- 03:36 --> 03:39receptors and when you see this target,
- 03:39 --> 03:42this agent binds into it and
- 03:42 --> 03:46sends a signal and the signal
- 03:46 --> 03:48we were able to see where
- 03:48 --> 03:50the signal is sent from.
- 03:50 --> 03:54So when you use the same agent
- 03:54 --> 03:59that you detect a specific cell
- 03:59 --> 04:01and then you bind into another agent,
- 04:01 --> 04:06which now has a different behavior and is
- 04:06 --> 04:09basically a radiation therapy agent and
- 04:09 --> 04:14we inject the same agent in your vein.
- 04:14 --> 04:16It again binds into the tumor
- 04:16 --> 04:18cell that you're targeting and
- 04:18 --> 04:20now it destroys the tumor cell.
- 04:20 --> 04:25So the concept of being able to use a
- 04:25 --> 04:29diagnostic biomarker and translate that
- 04:29 --> 04:30into a therapeutic agent,
- 04:30 --> 04:34that's when you get to the theranostics.
- 04:40 --> 04:43This theranostics concept when you use the
- 04:43 --> 04:47exact same molecule to look and to
- 04:47 --> 04:50treat a certain pathology or disease.
- 04:51 --> 04:53And so that seems to play
- 04:53 --> 04:56into this whole concept that we've
- 04:56 --> 04:58talked about on the show previously
- 04:58 --> 05:00about you know, targeted therapies.
- 05:00 --> 05:03Usually we talk about targeted
- 05:03 --> 05:05therapies for chemotherapy or
- 05:05 --> 05:07immunotherapy where we're looking
- 05:07 --> 05:09at a particular biomarker.
- 05:09 --> 05:12But here it sounds like you're delivering
- 05:12 --> 05:15radiation with the same kind of concept.
- 05:15 --> 05:16Is that right?
- 05:16 --> 05:18Yes, that is exactly right.
- 05:18 --> 05:21So this is a targeted therapy, so you
- 05:21 --> 05:24choose your target and there
- 05:24 --> 05:27are a lot of these targets
- 05:27 --> 05:30being developed in the pipeline,
- 05:30 --> 05:35and each specific cancer usually will have
- 05:35 --> 05:40a specific target that you want to reach,
- 05:40 --> 05:43and the idea is to always
- 05:43 --> 05:45hit targets which are
- 05:45 --> 05:47present in cancer cells,
- 05:47 --> 05:50but not in normal body cells.
- 05:50 --> 05:55So as we move forward into more
- 05:55 --> 05:57personalized and better precision therapies
- 05:57 --> 06:01where when we talk about these words,
- 06:01 --> 06:04we're talking about things that
- 06:04 --> 06:06will target the diseased cells
- 06:06 --> 06:08and not the normal cells.
- 06:08 --> 06:12And again then you use this target and you
- 06:12 --> 06:16bind into an agent that is capable of
- 06:16 --> 06:17delivering radiation,
- 06:17 --> 06:20and this radiation goes inside the vein.
- 06:20 --> 06:23It doesn't come from outside of your body,
- 06:23 --> 06:26as when patients go for radiation therapy.
- 06:26 --> 06:29It's really injected into the blood,
- 06:29 --> 06:30just like a blood draw.
- 06:30 --> 06:33You inject into an IV or when you
- 06:33 --> 06:35have an infusion and then this
- 06:35 --> 06:37travels throughout your bloodstream
- 06:37 --> 06:41and it reaches a target to bind and
- 06:41 --> 06:43deliver the radiation in a very
- 06:43 --> 06:46precise way and very controlled way.
- 06:46 --> 06:49In the exact location that you're
- 06:49 --> 06:53targeting and this is really where
- 06:53 --> 06:56a lot of things are trending
- 06:56 --> 06:59because we're we're looking into
- 06:59 --> 07:03disrupting the cancer processes without
- 07:03 --> 07:07influencing the normal cellular process.
- 07:08 --> 07:09And so when we think about that,
- 07:09 --> 07:12I mean on the one hand you think, gosh,
- 07:12 --> 07:14this may really reduce side effects
- 07:14 --> 07:17because you are minimizing the dose
- 07:17 --> 07:19that you're giving to normal tissues.
- 07:19 --> 07:23So presumably you will have less of
- 07:23 --> 07:26the side effects that are associated
- 07:26 --> 07:27with treating normal tissues.
- 07:27 --> 07:29On the other hand,
- 07:29 --> 07:31the concept of delivering
- 07:31 --> 07:33radiation through a vein,
- 07:33 --> 07:35albeit in a targeted way,
- 07:35 --> 07:38may induce some other side effects.
- 07:38 --> 07:39So can you
- 07:39 --> 07:41tell us a little bit more
- 07:41 --> 07:42about the side effect profile
- 07:42 --> 07:45of this kind of modality?
- 07:45 --> 07:49Sure, yes, that is exactly the point.
- 07:49 --> 07:52When you deliver something in the blood,
- 07:52 --> 07:54you have a target, but not always.
- 07:54 --> 07:57The target is only expressed
- 07:57 --> 07:59in tumoral cells
- 07:59 --> 08:01or only the target ends up
- 08:01 --> 08:03in only tumorous cells.
- 08:03 --> 08:07For example, the kidney filtrates the blood.
- 08:07 --> 08:09So when you deliver these
- 08:09 --> 08:11radiation therapies in the vein,
- 08:11 --> 08:14eventually you will have radiation
- 08:14 --> 08:17agents crossing through your kidneys.
- 08:17 --> 08:20So there are side effects related
- 08:20 --> 08:23to where the cells circulate and
- 08:23 --> 08:26to other locations that also
- 08:26 --> 08:29express this type of target.
- 08:29 --> 08:32That is present in whatever
- 08:32 --> 08:33therapy you're using.
- 08:33 --> 08:35So for example,
- 08:35 --> 08:38the bone marrow receives a certain
- 08:38 --> 08:41dose of radiation and we control that.
- 08:41 --> 08:44We know the exact dosage which
- 08:44 --> 08:47is toxic for the bone marrow.
- 08:47 --> 08:48And we always,
- 08:48 --> 08:51when we're looking into our patient
- 08:51 --> 08:54who is a candidate for these therapies,
- 08:54 --> 08:57we have to make sure that the
- 08:57 --> 08:59bone marrow is functional
- 08:59 --> 09:01enough to receive that.
- 09:01 --> 09:03And the other issue usually
- 09:03 --> 09:06is kidney function, which
- 09:06 --> 09:10we know that as the radiation
- 09:10 --> 09:12circulates into the blood,
- 09:12 --> 09:16there is a part of it that will
- 09:16 --> 09:17end up in the kidneys.
- 09:17 --> 09:18So we control for that.
- 09:18 --> 09:21We make sure that the function of
- 09:21 --> 09:24the kidney and the marrow are within
- 09:24 --> 09:26as normal as possible or within
- 09:26 --> 09:29acceptable range to have these therapies.
- 09:30 --> 09:34Usually the side effects are
- 09:34 --> 09:37really different from traditional
- 09:37 --> 09:41chemotherapy as I just mentioned.
- 09:41 --> 09:43Yeah, and different from
- 09:43 --> 09:45traditional radiation therapy as
- 09:45 --> 09:47well because radiation therapy as
- 09:47 --> 09:50you had mentioned previously is
- 09:50 --> 09:52generally given from the outside.
- 09:52 --> 09:55So oftentimes when we give radiation there
- 09:55 --> 09:58are skin changes and so on and so forth.
- 09:58 --> 10:00You would think that a lot of
- 10:00 --> 10:01that would not be present
- 10:01 --> 10:02when delivering radiation
- 10:02 --> 10:04from the inside.
- 10:04 --> 10:06Yes, that's accurate.
- 10:06 --> 10:10There is a very hypothetical
- 10:10 --> 10:14risk of you having an infiltration
- 10:14 --> 10:16as you deliver these therapies.
- 10:16 --> 10:18So there's a little leakage
- 10:18 --> 10:20around the vessel that happens
- 10:20 --> 10:22with this high dose radiation.
- 10:22 --> 10:23But usually we're very careful.
- 10:23 --> 10:26We always test the veins, we observe
- 10:26 --> 10:30as the therapy is ongoing to make
- 10:30 --> 10:32sure there's no fluid extravasation
- 10:32 --> 10:34from the veins.
- 10:34 --> 10:36So usually this is
- 10:36 --> 10:39a very, very rare complication
- 10:39 --> 10:42to have any cutaneous effect,
- 10:42 --> 10:44and that would really be
- 10:44 --> 10:46related to the infusion itself,
- 10:46 --> 10:48but usually that's not the problem.
- 10:48 --> 10:51And then for radiation,
- 10:51 --> 10:52sometimes,
- 10:52 --> 10:55for example if you're radiating the lungs,
- 10:55 --> 10:58you can have the heart very close
- 10:58 --> 11:00to the lungs and you can have
- 11:00 --> 11:02some kind of damage to the heart.
- 11:02 --> 11:06Which is for us when we're doing intravenous,
- 11:06 --> 11:08that's not really a problem of
- 11:08 --> 11:11the anatomy of where things are.
- 11:11 --> 11:13The radiation with the liver
- 11:13 --> 11:14doesn't travel very far.
- 11:14 --> 11:17These particles travel very,
- 11:17 --> 11:21very small range and they really
- 11:21 --> 11:24are from where they bind,
- 11:24 --> 11:29the effect is really very local.
- 11:29 --> 11:31So adjacent organs
- 11:31 --> 11:36are usually not the problem.
- 11:36 --> 11:38It sounds like, you know,
- 11:38 --> 11:42this is really potentially a wonderful
- 11:42 --> 11:44way of delivering radiation.
- 11:44 --> 11:47If you can spare adjacent organs,
- 11:47 --> 11:49you can spare a lot of the
- 11:49 --> 11:51cutaneous side effects that we
- 11:51 --> 11:52see with traditional radiation.
- 11:52 --> 11:55And as you mentioned,
- 11:55 --> 11:58many cancers these days have potential
- 11:58 --> 12:01targets and more and more are being
- 12:01 --> 12:03discovered and developed every day.
- 12:03 --> 12:07But is this really something that is
- 12:07 --> 12:10being offered for all kinds of cancers?
- 12:10 --> 12:13Does it have a role in particular
- 12:13 --> 12:16types of cancers or is this
- 12:16 --> 12:18something that is still kind of
- 12:18 --> 12:20working its way through clinical
- 12:20 --> 12:23trials or is this actually something
- 12:23 --> 12:24that's ready for prime time?
- 12:26 --> 12:30So the first therapy that was approved
- 12:30 --> 12:33for neuroendocrine cancers in the
- 12:33 --> 12:36United States happened in 2018.
- 12:36 --> 12:39So this is something that's been
- 12:39 --> 12:41widespread and commercially
- 12:41 --> 12:44available for four years now.
- 12:44 --> 12:47So it's a new technology even
- 12:47 --> 12:49though there has been other
- 12:49 --> 12:53uses in elsewhere in the world,
- 12:53 --> 12:56particularly Europe and Australia.
- 12:56 --> 12:59They have been leading places
- 12:59 --> 13:01for these therapies.
- 13:07 --> 13:11As we move into more knowledge
- 13:11 --> 13:16of this latest therapy we
- 13:16 --> 13:20are just expanding their use.
- 13:20 --> 13:23So usually how these work is
- 13:23 --> 13:25they get approved into the end
- 13:25 --> 13:28of cycle of therapy of a disease
- 13:28 --> 13:31when patients don't have a lot
- 13:31 --> 13:34of therapy options and
- 13:34 --> 13:37then start working the way back
- 13:37 --> 13:39into looking how these therapies
- 13:39 --> 13:43do earlier in the disease cycle and then
- 13:43 --> 13:45by understanding that a little better,
- 13:45 --> 13:49that's how these get more widely spread.
- 13:49 --> 13:51So we'll pick up this conversation,
- 13:51 --> 13:53but first we need to take a
- 13:53 --> 13:55short break for medical minute.
- 13:55 --> 13:57Please stay tuned to learn more about
- 13:57 --> 13:59the role of theranostics with my
- 13:59 --> 14:01guest doctor Gabriella Spilberg.
- 14:01 --> 14:03Funding for Yale Cancer Answers is
- 14:03 --> 14:05provided by Smilow Cancer Hospital,
- 14:05 --> 14:07where their survivorship clinic is available
- 14:07 --> 14:10to educate survivors on the prevention,
- 14:10 --> 14:12detection, and treatment of complications
- 14:12 --> 14:14resulting from cancer treatment.
- 14:14 --> 14:18Smilowcancerhospital.org.
- 14:18 --> 14:21The American Cancer Society estimates that
- 14:21 --> 14:23over 200,000 cases of Melanoma will be
- 14:23 --> 14:26diagnosed in the United States this year,
- 14:26 --> 14:29with over 1000 patients in Connecticut alone.
- 14:29 --> 14:31While Melanoma accounts for only
- 14:31 --> 14:34about 1% of skin cancer cases,
- 14:34 --> 14:37it causes the most skin cancer deaths,
- 14:37 --> 14:38but when detected early,
- 14:38 --> 14:41it is easily treated and highly curable.
- 14:41 --> 14:43Clinical trials are currently
- 14:43 --> 14:45underway at federally designated
- 14:45 --> 14:47Comprehensive cancer centers such as
- 14:47 --> 14:49Yale Cancer Center and Smilow Cancer
- 14:49 --> 14:51Hospital to test innovative new
- 14:51 --> 14:53treatments for Melanoma. The goal of
- 14:53 --> 14:55the specialized programs of research
- 14:55 --> 14:58excellence in skin Cancer Grant is to
- 14:58 --> 15:00better understand the biology of skin cancer,
- 15:00 --> 15:02where the focus on discovering
- 15:02 --> 15:04targets that will lead to improved
- 15:04 --> 15:06diagnosis and treatment.
- 15:06 --> 15:08More information is available
- 15:08 --> 15:09at yalecancercenter.org.
- 15:09 --> 15:12You're listening to Connecticut public radio.
- 15:14 --> 15:16Welcome back to Yale Cancer Answers.
- 15:16 --> 15:18This is doctor Anees Chagpar,
- 15:18 --> 15:20and I'm joined tonight by my guest,
- 15:20 --> 15:22Doctor Gabriela Spilberg.
- 15:22 --> 15:23We're talking about theranostics
- 15:23 --> 15:26and clinical trials for GI cancers.
- 15:26 --> 15:28And right before the break, Gabriela,
- 15:28 --> 15:32you were starting to tell us about how
- 15:32 --> 15:34theranostics and in fact many therapies
- 15:34 --> 15:37find their way into clinical practice.
- 15:37 --> 15:40So you started by saying that
- 15:40 --> 15:42usually these are, you know,
- 15:42 --> 15:45looked at in the setting
- 15:45 --> 15:48of situations where individuals may
- 15:48 --> 15:51not have other options and then gradually
- 15:51 --> 15:55they kind of work them their way into
- 15:55 --> 15:58not being something of last resort,
- 15:58 --> 16:00but being more mainstream
- 16:00 --> 16:03in terms of practice.
- 16:03 --> 16:05So can you kind of pick up the
- 16:05 --> 16:08conversation there and tell us a little
- 16:08 --> 16:10bit more about how theranostics is
- 16:10 --> 16:12finding its way into clinical practice
- 16:12 --> 16:15where it's still in clinical trials?
- 16:15 --> 16:17You mentioned prior to the break that
- 16:17 --> 16:19this really started with neuroendocrine
- 16:19 --> 16:22tumors and was approved back in 2018.
- 16:22 --> 16:25So is it now the case that everybody
- 16:25 --> 16:27with neuroendocrine tumors are
- 16:27 --> 16:29being offered theranostics or is
- 16:29 --> 16:31it still kind of a niche thing?
- 16:32 --> 16:36So one of the things to realize even
- 16:36 --> 16:39before that is the administration
- 16:39 --> 16:41of these therapies are complex,
- 16:41 --> 16:46they require a multi specialty clinical team.
- 16:46 --> 16:49And not everywhere that's available.
- 16:49 --> 16:53So whenever you have that available and you
- 16:53 --> 16:58have cancers that have indication to therapy,
- 16:58 --> 17:02that's when these usually are more used or
- 17:02 --> 17:06if patients are referred to cancer centers,
- 17:06 --> 17:09which have specifically lines of
- 17:09 --> 17:13therapies at the moment for GI cancers,
- 17:13 --> 17:16these are available for gastroenterology,
- 17:16 --> 17:18pancreatic cancers,
- 17:18 --> 17:22for example for bronchial carcinoid or
- 17:22 --> 17:27more rare types of neuroendocrine cancers.
- 17:27 --> 17:31These are not on label FDA
- 17:31 --> 17:33approved therapies.
- 17:33 --> 17:36However, there are initial experiences
- 17:36 --> 17:40of places who have used them on
- 17:40 --> 17:43clinical trial basis or off label use,
- 17:43 --> 17:47so every patient is different.
- 17:49 --> 17:54Different set of findings and exams and
- 17:54 --> 17:58genetic mutations and information really.
- 17:58 --> 18:01And each cancer develops in a
- 18:01 --> 18:02different way from another.
- 18:02 --> 18:06So you won't find one cancer that has
- 18:06 --> 18:09the exact genetic profile as another.
- 18:09 --> 18:12So these have to be looked at in a
- 18:12 --> 18:14very individualized way and I think
- 18:14 --> 18:16that's one of the big challenges
- 18:16 --> 18:19is always to pinpoint who is
- 18:19 --> 18:21going to really benefit
- 18:21 --> 18:22from these therapies?
- 18:22 --> 18:25So patient selection
- 18:25 --> 18:28plays a very important role and
- 18:28 --> 18:31who can really get these therapies.
- 18:31 --> 18:35These are patients that are usually discussed
- 18:35 --> 18:37in multidisciplinary tumor boards
- 18:37 --> 18:40which are meetings where multiple
- 18:40 --> 18:43specialties of doctors come together
- 18:43 --> 18:46to look at something and come up with
- 18:46 --> 18:49a team opinion of what is the best
- 18:49 --> 18:52approach. These are not usually
- 18:52 --> 18:55patients with very initial staging
- 18:55 --> 18:58of disease or very early.
- 18:58 --> 19:00These are patients who have a history,
- 19:00 --> 19:03who have had disease for a while or
- 19:03 --> 19:05when they discover they have disease,
- 19:05 --> 19:08it's not very localized.
- 19:08 --> 19:15So any type of systemic therapy
- 19:15 --> 19:17with theranostics at the moment,
- 19:17 --> 19:20that's how it's been used.
- 19:21 --> 19:25It's made its way prime time for
- 19:25 --> 19:28GI specifically,
- 19:28 --> 19:31but it's not yet widespread for
- 19:31 --> 19:34every single type of neuroendocrine
- 19:34 --> 19:38cancer and we're not there yet.
- 19:38 --> 19:43There's a lot of pipeline development
- 19:43 --> 19:47into which better receptors or targets
- 19:47 --> 19:51we should use and as of this year,
- 19:51 --> 19:532022, this was recently approved
- 19:53 --> 19:55for prostate cancer.
- 19:55 --> 19:58Another agent but the same concept.
- 20:00 --> 20:04So it sounds like first off,
- 20:04 --> 20:07there are certain cancers that
- 20:07 --> 20:10are approved for theranostics and
- 20:10 --> 20:13others that are not. Why is that?
- 20:13 --> 20:17I mean if so many cancers have targets
- 20:17 --> 20:20and as a breast cancer surgeon,
- 20:20 --> 20:23I'm thinking about certainly breast cancer
- 20:23 --> 20:26has a number of targets that we use all
- 20:26 --> 20:30the time in terms of ER and PR and HER II.
- 20:30 --> 20:32When we think about all
- 20:32 --> 20:33kinds of other cancers,
- 20:33 --> 20:36there are similar markers.
- 20:36 --> 20:39What is it about some markers
- 20:39 --> 20:42that make them good candidates
- 20:42 --> 20:46for theranostics and makes other
- 20:46 --> 20:49markers and other cancers not?
- 20:50 --> 20:53Well, so specifically for breast cancer,
- 20:53 --> 20:56I think we will get there,
- 20:56 --> 20:59we just need a little time.
- 20:59 --> 21:01So all these processes require
- 21:01 --> 21:04something called radiolabeling,
- 21:04 --> 21:07which means you have to attach a
- 21:07 --> 21:10radioactive particle into these targets
- 21:10 --> 21:13and radiolabeling is a difficult
- 21:13 --> 21:16process that not always works
- 21:16 --> 21:20with any target you need or want,
- 21:20 --> 21:25but there is a lot of work being done for
- 21:25 --> 21:29HER 2 targeting and for imaging.
- 21:29 --> 21:33So it's bringing all these pieces
- 21:33 --> 21:36of the technology together to make a
- 21:36 --> 21:39specific agent a good candidate for a
- 21:39 --> 21:43theranostics pair is what's hard.
- 21:43 --> 21:46Just this technology
- 21:46 --> 21:48is very new. If you think about it,
- 21:48 --> 21:51it was first approved in the US four
- 21:51 --> 21:53years ago and here we are four years
- 21:53 --> 21:57later we have a second one in the market
- 21:57 --> 22:00and there's multiple others in the pipeline.
- 22:00 --> 22:04And I think also molecular imaging
- 22:04 --> 22:07requires a lot of structure.
- 22:07 --> 22:09So you have to have a radio chemist,
- 22:09 --> 22:13you have to have sometimes a cyclotron.
- 22:13 --> 22:16Which is where you generate
- 22:16 --> 22:19these radioactive particles.
- 22:19 --> 22:20They have 1/2 time,
- 22:20 --> 22:23which means that they decay every
- 22:23 --> 22:26one hour 5 hours or 10 hours
- 22:26 --> 22:286 days depending on the agent.
- 22:28 --> 22:32Half of what you generated is just gone,
- 22:32 --> 22:33you don't have it anymore.
- 22:33 --> 22:37So these technologies are difficult
- 22:37 --> 22:41to develop and are hard to join
- 22:41 --> 22:44a big team to work on something.
- 22:44 --> 22:47So until we get there,
- 22:47 --> 22:49it's just going to take a while.
- 22:49 --> 22:51But it doesn't mean that the
- 22:51 --> 22:53cancers are not suitable.
- 22:53 --> 22:57It's just the time that the technology
- 22:57 --> 23:01needs to get to deployment into
- 23:01 --> 23:04clinical practice and widespread use.
- 23:04 --> 23:10At the moment we don't have any of
- 23:10 --> 23:15the newer alpha therapies.
- 23:15 --> 23:18But the difference between these other
- 23:18 --> 23:21therapies that we're looking at and
- 23:21 --> 23:23what's currently approved,
- 23:23 --> 23:26which is a better meter is basically
- 23:26 --> 23:28how much damage to the tissues
- 23:28 --> 23:31surrounding them they can make.
- 23:31 --> 23:34And alpha therapies are much higher energy,
- 23:34 --> 23:37which means they have a destruction
- 23:37 --> 23:39power which is higher than lutetium.
- 23:39 --> 23:43So these are expected also to
- 23:43 --> 23:45revolutionize the market and
- 23:45 --> 23:48how these therapies are used and
- 23:48 --> 23:50approached because what's currently
- 23:50 --> 23:51available,
- 23:51 --> 23:54which is a beta doesn't destroy
- 23:54 --> 23:57or shrink the tumor as much as we
- 23:57 --> 23:59were hoping or we would like.
- 23:59 --> 24:05So there is also this concept
- 24:05 --> 24:07that is an evolving field.
- 24:07 --> 24:10This is not a mature field at all.
- 24:10 --> 24:13There's a lot of knowledge
- 24:13 --> 24:15that we're still gaining from.
- 24:15 --> 24:17The deployment of these therapies,
- 24:17 --> 24:20the prostate cancer therapies
- 24:20 --> 24:23specifically was initially approved
- 24:23 --> 24:26for patients who failed a taxane
- 24:26 --> 24:29based therapy and yet there were
- 24:29 --> 24:32results published from a trial
- 24:32 --> 24:35just recently showing that even in
- 24:35 --> 24:37patients that don't fail therapy
- 24:37 --> 24:39but have metastatic disease,
- 24:39 --> 24:42they do have a benefit on them.
- 24:42 --> 24:46So oncology trials are trials that
- 24:46 --> 24:48they long for you to gather
- 24:48 --> 24:50information enough to understand
- 24:51 --> 24:53what really is happening.
- 24:53 --> 24:55And on that point,
- 24:55 --> 24:57you know in thinking about
- 24:57 --> 24:59the role of theranostics,
- 24:59 --> 25:02is it your perception that eventually
- 25:02 --> 25:05these will replace external beam radiation?
- 25:05 --> 25:09So standard radiation will now be given
- 25:09 --> 25:12with the more targeted intravenous
- 25:12 --> 25:16radiation of theranostics and
- 25:16 --> 25:17if you believe that that's
- 25:17 --> 25:18where the field is going,
- 25:18 --> 25:21do we have the clinical trial data
- 25:21 --> 25:24to suggest that theranostics is
- 25:24 --> 25:27equally if not more efficacious
- 25:27 --> 25:30than standard radiation therapy?
- 25:31 --> 25:33I don't think we're there yet.
- 25:33 --> 25:36I think they have complementary use.
- 25:36 --> 25:38When you're thinking about radiation,
- 25:38 --> 25:41you're thinking about
- 25:41 --> 25:43external traditional radiation,
- 25:43 --> 25:45you're thinking about local therapy.
- 25:45 --> 25:48When you're thinking about theranostics,
- 25:48 --> 25:51you're thinking about systemic therapy,
- 25:51 --> 25:53which are two different concepts.
- 25:53 --> 25:57So when someone has a small lung nodule and
- 25:57 --> 26:01you want to target that one small nodule
- 26:01 --> 26:04and there is no knowledge
- 26:04 --> 26:06of widespread disease,
- 26:06 --> 26:09but it's possible that external radiation
- 26:09 --> 26:13would still be better than intravenous
- 26:13 --> 26:17radiation because you have some
- 26:17 --> 26:20side effects, but they're different
- 26:20 --> 26:23from when we do intravenous radiation
- 26:23 --> 26:26and then when patients have disease
- 26:26 --> 26:29that we know that are not localized,
- 26:29 --> 26:33that they can't have surgery to remove,
- 26:33 --> 26:35just targeting one location
- 26:35 --> 26:38is not going to be enough.
- 26:38 --> 26:40That's when you do systemic
- 26:40 --> 26:43therapy and you use theranostics,
- 26:43 --> 26:46which is the same concept as chemotherapy,
- 26:46 --> 26:48except now
- 26:48 --> 26:52we're using radioactive chemotherapy.
- 26:52 --> 26:56It's another term that's been
- 26:56 --> 26:58used to treat these patients.
- 26:58 --> 26:59So you're not really looking
- 26:59 --> 27:01for a localized disease,
- 27:01 --> 27:03but you're looking for systemic,
- 27:03 --> 27:06widespread.
- 27:07 --> 27:08And finally, you know,
- 27:08 --> 27:11you had mentioned that one of the
- 27:11 --> 27:14things that's very important is
- 27:14 --> 27:15thinking about patient selection.
- 27:15 --> 27:18So are there particular patients
- 27:18 --> 27:22that are better suited or not
- 27:22 --> 27:24suited to radioactive chemotherapy
- 27:24 --> 27:26or this intravenous radiation.
- 27:27 --> 27:32Yes. So one of the key concepts is that
- 27:32 --> 27:36whatever target you are looking at,
- 27:36 --> 27:38the patient has to have high
- 27:38 --> 27:40expression of the target.
- 27:40 --> 27:43So for example, a neuroendocrine patient
- 27:43 --> 27:46when we do lutetium dotatate specifically,
- 27:46 --> 27:50which is the therapy that's approved,
- 27:50 --> 27:53we are targeting somatostatin
- 27:53 --> 27:56receptor Type 2.
- 27:56 --> 28:00So if the disease they have
- 28:00 --> 28:02doesn't really express significant
- 28:02 --> 28:05density of those receptors,
- 28:05 --> 28:10then those patients are not great
- 28:10 --> 28:12patients for that therapy,
- 28:12 --> 28:15great candidates because you're not going
- 28:15 --> 28:17to be targeting whatever they have.
- 28:17 --> 28:21So having the target overly expressed
- 28:21 --> 28:25in the disease is really key here
- 28:25 --> 28:28and that's looked at by using the
- 28:28 --> 28:31diagnostic agent with PET CT.
- 28:32 --> 28:34Doctor Gabriela Spilberg is an assistant
- 28:34 --> 28:36professor of radiology and biomedical
- 28:36 --> 28:39imaging at the Yale School of Medicine.
- 28:39 --> 28:41If you have questions,
- 28:41 --> 28:43the address is canceranswers@yale.edu,
- 28:43 --> 28:45and past editions of the program
- 28:45 --> 28:48are available in audio and written
- 28:48 --> 28:49form at yalecancercenter.org.
- 28:49 --> 28:51We hope you'll join us next week to
- 28:51 --> 28:53learn more about the fight against
- 28:53 --> 28:55cancer here on Connecticut Public Radio.
- 28:55 --> 28:57Funding for Yale Cancer Answers is
- 28:57 --> 29:00provided by Smilow Cancer Hospital.
Information
Theranostics and Clinical Trials for GI Cancers with guest Dr. Gabriela Spilberg
December 25, 2022
Yale Cancer Center
visit: http://www.yalecancercenter.org
email: canceranswers@yale.edu
call: 203-785-4095
ID
9331Guests
Dr. Gabriela SpilbergTo Cite
DCA Citation Guide