Faisability pilot study to explore inflammation with 18F-DPA-714 PET CT versus immunochemistry in triple negative breast cancer: Design protocol

Authors

  • Caroline Rousseau ICO René Gauducheau, F-4400 Saint-Herblain, France Author
  • Thomas Godefroy ICO René Gauducheau, F-4400 Saint-Herblain, France Author
  • Nicolas Arlicot UMR 1253, iBrain, Université de Tours, Inserm, Tours, France Author
  • Olivier Kerdraon ICO René Gauducheau, F-4400 Saint-Herblain, France Author
  • Ludovic Ferrer CNRS, Inserm, CRCINA, F-44000 Nantes, France Author
  • Nadia Fleury ICO René Gauducheau, F-4400 Saint-Herblain, France Author
  • Françoise Kraeber-Bodéré Nantes University, F-44000 Nantes, France Author
  • Loic Campion CNRS, Inserm, CRCINA, F-44000 Nantes, France Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33425/2768-4598.1009

Keywords:

Triple negative breast cancer, TSPO, Immunohistochemistry

Abstract

The Triple Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC), despite a good initial response to conventional chemotherapy, relapses frequently and has a poor prognosis after the onset of metastases. It is therefore interesting to develop new relevant targets to establish a prognosis but also potentially to propose a targeted therapy for a theranostic approach. A high density of M2-type macrophages presence in the primary TNBC tumor predicted an unfavorable prognosis. The presence of activated M2-type macrophages can be evaluated by measuring the expression of a translocating protein (TSPO) with [18F]-DPA-714 PETCT. This proof-of-concept study with [18F]-DPA-714 PET-CT has a design to establish the correlation between immunohistochemistry tumor characterization and in vivo imaging. If a valid correlation will be established, [18F]-DPA-714 PET-CT could be a based image prognosis biomarker, apart from pathological data, which can be fragmented as biopsy or modified by previous treatments. It would allow adapting early the type/dose-intensity of treatment and considering developments of treatments targeting M2-type macrophages.

Published

2025-07-30

Issue

Section

Articles