Nucleophilic incorporation of [(18)F]F(-) under aqueous conditions holds several advantages in radiopharmaceutical development, especially with the advent of complex biological pharmacophores. Sulfonyl fluorides can be prepared in water at room temperature, yet they have not been assayed as a potential means to (18)F-labelled biomarkers for PET chemistry. We developed a general route to prepare bifunctional 4-formyl-, 3-formyl-, 4-maleimido- and 4-oxylalkynl-arylsulfonyl [(18)F]fluorides from their sulfonyl chloride analogues in 1:1 mixtures of acetonitrile, THF, or tBuOH and Cs[(18)F]F/Cs(2)CO(3(aq.)) in a reaction time of 15 min at room temperature. With the exception of 4-N-maleimide-benzenesulfonyl fluoride (3), pyridine could be used to simplify radiotracer purification by selectively degrading the precursor without significantly affecting observed yields. The addition of pyridine at the start of [(18)F]fluorination (1:1:0.8 tBuOH/Cs(2)CO(3(aq.))/pyridine) did not negatively affect yields of 3-formyl-2,4,6-trimethylbenzenesulfonyl [(18)F]fluoride (2) and dramatically improved the yields of 4-(prop-2-ynyloxy)benzenesulfonyl [(18)F]fluoride (4). The N-arylsulfonyl-4-dimethylaminopyridinium derivative of 4 (14) can be prepared and incorporates (18)F efficiently in solutions of 100 % aqueous Cs(2)CO(3) (10 mg mL(-1)). As proof-of-principle, [(18)F]2 was synthesised in a preparative fashion [88(±8) % decay corrected (n=6) from start-of-synthesis] and used to radioactively label an oxyamino-modified bombesin(6-14) analogue [35(±6) % decay corrected (n=4) from start-of-synthesis]. Total preparation time was 105-109 min from start-of-synthesis. Although the (18)F-peptide exhibited evidence of proteolytic defluorination and modification, our study is the first step in developing an aqueous, room temperature (18)F labelling strategy.
BackgroundTalimogene laherparepvec (T-VEC) is an intralesionally delivered, modified herpes simplex virus type-1 oncolytic immunotherapy. The biodistribution, shedding, and potential transmission of T-VEC was systematically evaluated during and after completion of therapy in adults with advanced melanoma.MethodsIn this phase 2, single-arm, open-label study, T-VEC was administered into injectable lesions initially at 106 plaque-forming units (PFU)/mL, 108 PFU/mL 21 days later, and 108 PFU/mL every 14 (±3) days thereafter. Injected lesions were covered with occlusive dressings for ≥1 week. Blood, urine, and swabs from exterior of occlusive dressings, surface of injected lesions, oral mucosa, anogenital area, and suspected herpetic lesions were collected throughout the study. Detectable T-VEC DNA was determined for each sample type; infectivity was determined for all swabs with detectable T-VEC DNA.FindingsSixty patients received ≥1 dose of T-VEC. During cycles 1–4, T-VEC DNA was detected in blood (98·3% of patients, 36·7% of samples), urine (31·7% of patients, 3·0% of samples) and swabs from injected lesions (100% of patients, 57·6% of samples), exterior of dressings (80% of patients,19·5% of samples), oral mucosa (8·3% of patients, 2·5% of samples), and anogenital area (8·0% of patients, 1·1% of samples). During the safety follow-up period, T-VEC DNA was only detected on swabs from injected lesions (14% of patients, 5.8% of samples). T-VEC DNA was detected in 4/37 swabs (3/19 patients) of suspected herpetic lesions. Among all samples, only those from the surface of injected lesions tested positive for infectivity (8/740 [1·1%]). Three close contacts reported signs and symptoms of suspected herpetic origin; however, no lesions had detectable T-VEC DNA.InterpretationUsing current guidelines, T-VEC can be administered safely to patients with advanced melanoma and is unlikely to be transmitted to close contacts with appropriate use of occlusive dressings.FundThis study was funded by Amgen Inc.: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02014441.
BackgroundTalimogene laherparepvec (T-VEC), an oncolytic virus, was designed to selectively replicate in and lyse tumor cells, releasing tumor-derived antigen to stimulate a tumor-specific immune response.MethodsIn this phase II study in patients with unresectable stage IIIB–IV melanoma, we evaluated non-injected lesions to establish whether baseline or change in intratumoral CD8+ T-cell density (determined using immunohistochemistry) correlated with T-VEC clinical response.ResultsOf 112 enrolled patients, 111 received ≥1 dose of T-VEC. After a median follow-up of 108.0 weeks, objective/complete response rates were 28%/14% in the overall population and 32%/18% in patients with stage IIIB–IVM1a disease. No unexpected toxicity occurred. Baseline and week 6 change from baseline CD8+ T-cell density results were available for 91 and 65 patients, respectively. Neither baseline nor change in CD8+ T-cell density correlated with objective response rate, changes in tumor burden, duration of response or durable response rate. However, a 2.4-fold median increase in CD8+ T-cell density in non-injected lesions from baseline to week 6 was observed. In exploratory analyses, multiparameter immunofluorescence showed that after treatment there was an increase in the proportion of infiltrating CD8+ T-cells expressing granzyme B and checkpoint markers (programmed death-1, programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen-4) in non-injected lesions, together with an increase in helper T-cells. Consistent with T-cell infiltrate, we observed an increase in the adaptive resistance marker PD-L1 in non-injected lesions.ConclusionsThis study indicates that T-VEC induces systemic immune activity and alters the tumor microenvironment in a way that will likely enhance the effects of other immunotherapy agents in combination therapy.Trial registration numberNCT02366195.
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