DOTA-TATE, DOTATATE or DOTA-octreotate is a substance which, when bound to various radionuclides, has been tested for the treatment and diagnosis of certain types of cancer, mainly neuroendocrine tumours.
Video DOTA-TATE
Chemistry and mechanism of action
DOTA-TATE is an amide of the acid DOTA (top left in the image), which acts as a chelator for a radionuclide, and (Tyr3)-octreotate, a derivative of octreotide. The latter binds to somatostatin receptors, which are found on the cell surfaces of a number of neuroendocrine tumours, and thus directs the radioactivity into the tumour.
Maps DOTA-TATE
Usage examples
Gallium (68Ga) DOTA-TATE (GaTate) is used for tumour diagnosis in positron emission tomography (PET). DOTA-TATE PET/CT has a much higher sensitivity compared to In-111 octreotide imaging.
Lutetium (177Lu) DOTA-TATE has been tested for the treatment of tumors such as carcinoid and endocrine pancreatic tumor. It is also known as Lutathera.
Patients are typically treated with an intravenous infusion of 7.5 GBq of lutetium-177 octreotate. After about four to six hours, the exposure rate of the patient has fallen to less than 25 microsieverts per hour at one metre and the patients can be discharged from hospital.
A course of therapy consists of four infusions at three monthly intervals.
Availability
Lu177 octreotate therapy is currently available under research protocols in five different medical centers in North America: Los Angeles (CA), Quebec City, (Qc), Birmingham, AL, Edmonton, (Ab), London, (On) as Houston (Tx) on clinical trial. Medical centers in Europe also offer this treatment. For instance: Cerrahpasa Hospital in Turkey, Uppsala Centre of Excellence in Neuroendocrine Tumors in Sweden and Erasmus University in the Netherlands. In Israel, treatment is available at Hadassah Ein Kerem Medical Center. In Australia, treatment is available at St George Hospital and Royal North Shore Hospital, Sydney; the Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital in Brisbane , the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre and at the Department of Nuclear Medicine at Fremantle Hospital in Western Australia. In Aarhus universitet hospital in Denmark. In the coming years such therapy will also become commercially available in Latvia, Riga - "Clinic of nuclear medicine".
See also
- DOTATOC or edotreotide, a similar compound
References
- Freedman, N; Klein, M; Gross, D; Glasberg, S; Meirovitz, A; Maimon, O; Krausz, Y; Bar-Shalom, R (2014). "Lu177-DOTATATE therapy for NET: Does tumor dose predict response?". J Nucl Med. 55 (Supplement 1).
Source of article : Wikipedia