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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

PET scan detects bone cancer in dogs using special antibody fragment

By Page, R L et al.·Published in Journal of nuclear medicine : official publication, Society of Nuclear Medicine·1994·College of Veterinary Medicine·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: PET imaging of osteosarcoma in dogs using a fluorine-18-labeled monoclonal antibody Fab fragment.

Species:
dog
OsteosarcomaMovement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of four dogs with confirmed bone cancer (osteosarcoma) underwent a special imaging test using a radioactive antibody to help identify the tumors. The imaging showed that one dog had a clear accumulation of the radioactive material at the tumor site shortly after the injection, indicating the presence of the cancer. In the other three dogs, the imaging also revealed signs of cancer spread to other areas. While these findings are early and more research is needed, this method could help improve how we diagnose and treat bone cancer in dogs.

People also search for: dog osteosarcoma treatment · bone cancer in dogs · PET scan for dog tumors

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Four dogs with histologically confirmed osteogenic sarcoma were studied with PET following intravenous injection of the 18F-labeled Fab fragment of TP-3, a monoclonal antibody specific for human and canine osteosarcomas. METHODS: The antibody fragment was labeled using the N-succinimidyl 8-[(4'-[18F]fluorobenzyl)amino]suberate acylation agent. Blood clearance of activity was biphasic in all dogs but half-times were variable (T1/2 beta = 2-13 hr). Catabolism of labeled Fab was reflected by the decrease in protein-associated activity in serum from more than 90% at 1 min to 60%-80% at 4 hr. RESULTS: PET images demonstrated increased accumulation of 18F at the primary tumor site relative to normal contralateral bone in one dog as early as 15 min after injection. Biopsies obtained after euthanasia indicated higher uptake at the edges of the tumor as observed on the PET scans. Tumor uptake was 1-3 x 10(-3)% injected dose/g, a level similar to that reported for other Fab fragments in human tumors. In the three dogs with metastatic disease, early PET images reflected activity in the blood pool but later uptake was observed in suspected metastatic sites. CONCLUSIONS: These results, although preliminary, suggest that PET imaging of 18F-labeled antibody fragments is feasible and that dogs with spontaneous tumors could be a valuable model for preclinical research with radioimmunoconjugates.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8071702/