Radium-223
Systematic (IUPAC) name | |
---|---|
Radium-223 chloride | |
Clinical data | |
Trade names | Xofigo |
AHFS/Drugs.com | entry |
Pregnancy cat. | X (US) |
Legal status | ℞-only (US) (experimental in most countries) |
Routes | injection |
Identifiers | |
CAS number | 444811-40-9 |
ATC code | V10XX03 |
UNII | RJ00KV3VTG |
ChEBI | CHEBI:74895 |
Chemical data | |
Formula | 223RaCl2 |
Mol. mass | 296.91 g/mol |
(what is this?) (verify) | |
Radium-223 (Ra-223) is an isotope of radium with an 11.4-day half-life, in contrast to the common isotope radium-226, discovered by the Curies, which has a 1601-year half-life. The principal use of radium-223, as a radiopharmaceutical to treat metastatic cancers in bone, takes advantage of its chemical similarity to calcium, and the short range of the alpha radiation it emits.
Origin and preparation
Although radium-223 is formed naturally in trace amounts by the decay of uranium-235, it is generally made artificially,[1] by exposing natural radium-226 to neutrons to produce radium-227, which decays with a 42 minute half-life to actinium-227. Actinium-227 (half-life 21.8 years) in turn decays via thorium-227 (half-life 18.7 days) to radium-223. This decay path makes it convenient to prepare radium-223 by "milking" it from an actinium-227 containing generator or "cow", similar to the Moly cows widely used to prepare the medically important isotope technetium-99m.[1]
Medical use
Radium-223 has been developed by the Norwegian company Algeta ASA, in a partnership with Bayer, under the trade name Xofigo (formerly Alpharadin), and is distributed as a solution containing radium-223 chloride (1000 kBq/ml), sodium chloride, and other ingredients for intravenous injection. The recommended regimen is six treatments of 50 kBq/kg (1.3 uCi per kg), repeated at 4-week intervals.[2].
Mechanism of action
The use of radium-223 to treat metastatic bone cancer relies on the ability of alpha radiation from radium-223 and its short-lived decay products to kill cancer cells. Radium is preferentially absorbed by bone by virtue of its chemical similarity to calcium, with most radium-223 that is not taken up by the bone being cleared, primarily via the gut, and excreted. Although radium-223 and its decay products also emit beta and gamma radiation, over 95% of the decay energy is in the form of alpha radiation.[1] Alpha radiation has very short range in tissues, around 2-10 cells, compared to beta or gamma radiation. This reduces damage to surrounding healthy tissues, producing an even more localized effect than the beta-emitter strontium-89, also used to treat bone cancer. Taking account of its preferential uptake by bone and the alpha particles' short range, radium-223 is estimated to give targeted osteogenic cells a radiation dose at least 8 fold higher than other non-targeted tissues[2]
Clinical trials and FDA approval
The phase II study of bone metastases in CRPC patients found no anemia or other effects.[citation needed]
Ra-223 successfully met the primary endpoint of overall survival in the phase III ALSYMPCA (ALpharadin in SYMptomatic Prostate CAncer patients) study for bone metastases resulting from castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) in 922 patients.[3]
The ALSYMPCA study was stopped early after a pre-planned efficacy interim analysis, following a recommendation from an Independent Data Monitoring Committee, on the basis of achieving a statistically significant improvement in overall survival (two-sided p-value = 0.0022, HR = 0.699, the median overall survival was 14.0 months for Ra-223 and 11.2 months for placebo).[3] Earlier phase II of the trial showed 4.5 months increased survival. The lower figure of 2.8 months increased survival in phase III, is a probable result of stopping the trail. Survival time for the patients still alive could not be calculated.[citation needed]
In May 2013, Ra-223 received marketing approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)[4] as a treatment for castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) with bone metastases in patients with symptomatic bone metastases and without known visceral disease. Ra-223 received priority review as a treatment for an unmet medical need, based on its ability to extend overall survival as shown its pivotal Phase III trial.[5]
Ra-223 also showed promising preliminary results in a phase IIa trial with bone metastases resulting from breast cancer that no longer responds to endocrine therapy. The data showed that Ra-223 reduced the levels of bone alkaline phosphatase (bALP) and urine N-telopeptide (uNTX), key markers of bone turnover associated with bone metastases in breast cancer.
Side effects
The most common side effects reported during clinical trials in men receiving Ra-223 were nausea, diarrhea, vomiting and swelling of the leg, ankle or foot. The most common abnormalities detected during blood testing were anemia, lymphocytopenia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia and neutropenia.[6]
Other proposed Ra-223 based pharmaceuticals
Although radium does easily form stable molecular complexes, there have been proposals to increase and customize its specificity for particular cancers by linking it to monoclonal antibodies, by enclosing the Ra-223 in liposomes bearing the antibodies on their surface.[7]
See also
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 R.H. Larsen, and Oyvind S. Bruland, "Radium Revisited" targeting of skeletal metastases by the alpha-emitter radium-223
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 FDA Access Data on Xofigo (Radium-223 dichloride)
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Full data report from the ALSYMPCA trial of radium-223 presented
- ↑ "FDA OKs pinpoint prostate cancer radiation drug Xofigo from Bayer, Algeta". Archived from the original on 2013-05-15.
- ↑ http://www.cancer.org/cancer/news/news/fda-approves-xofigo-for-advanced-prostate-cancer
- ↑ "FDA approves new drug for advanced prostate cancer". US FDA. Archived from the original on 2013-05-15.
- ↑ G. Vaidyanathan and M. Zalutsky, "Applications of 211At and 223Ra in targeted alpha particle radiotherapy," Curr. Radiopharm 4, 283 (2011) PMCID: PMC3368371
External links
- US National Institute of Health information an Alpharadin
- Algeta's information about Xofigo
- Alpharadin phase III study participation
- Alpharadin information from researcher Professor Oyvind S. Bruland
- "FDA approves new drug for advanced prostate cancer". US FDA. Archived from the original on 2013-05-15.
|