LABELED INHIBITORS OF PROSTATE SPECIFIC MEMBRANE ANTIGEN (PSMA), THEIR USE AS IMAGING AGENTS AND PHARMACEUTICAL AGENTS FOR THE TREATMENT OF PSMA-EXPRESSING CANCERS

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20210393809
  • Publication Number
    20210393809
  • Date Filed
    September 27, 2019
    5 years ago
  • Date Published
    December 23, 2021
    2 years ago
Abstract
The present invention relates to a compound of formula (1) (I), wherein Y3 is O or S, wherein s, t, u and w are 0 or 1, wherein i is an integer of from 1 to 3, wherein j is an integer of from 3 to 5, and wherein Z1, Z2 and Z3 are selected from the group consisting of CO2H, —SO2H, —SO3H, —OSO3H, and -0P03H2, R1 is —CH3 or H, X is selected from the group consisting of alkylaryl, aryl, alkylheteroaryl and heteroaryl, Y1 and Y2 are selected from the group consisting of aryl, alkylaryl, cycloalkyl, heterocycloalkyl, heteroaryl and alkylheteroaryl, and wherein A is a chelator residue having a structure selected from the group consisting of (la), (lb) and (lc), wherein R2, R3, R4 and R5 are selected from the group consisting of H, —CH2—COOH and —CH2—C(=0)-NH2 or wherein R2 and R4 form a —(CH2)n— bridge with n being an integer of from 1 to 3, wherein n is preferably 2, and wherein r, v and q are 0 or 1, with the proviso that in case u and w are 0, q and v are 0, and (A) wherein u and w are 1, or (B) wherein u is 0 and w is 1, and wherein A is selected from (la) or (lb), or (C) wherein A is not The compound is disclosed for use in the treatment of PSMA-expressing cancer.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention generally relates to the field of radiopharmaceuticals and their use in nuclear medicine as tracers, imaging agents and for the treatment of various disease states of PSMA-expressing cancers, especially prostate cancer, and metastases thereof.


RELATED ART

Prostate cancer (PCa) is the leading cancer in the US and European population. At least 1-2 million men in the western hemisphere suffer from prostate cancer and it is estimated that the disease will strike one in six men between the ages of 55 and 85. There are more than 300,000 new cases of prostate cancer diagnosed each year in USA. The mortality from the disease is second only to lung cancer. Currently, imaging methods with high resolution of the anatomy, such as computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and ultrasound, predominate for clinical imaging of prostate cancer. An estimated annual $2 billion is currently spent worldwide on surgical, radiation, drug therapy and minimally invasive treatments. However, there is presently no effective therapy for relapsing, metastatic, androgen-independent prostate cancer.


A variety of experimental low molecular weight PCa imaging agents are currently being pursued clinically, including radiolabeled choline analogs [18F]fluorodihydrotestosterone ([18F]FDHT), anti-1-amino-3-[18F]fluorocycIobutyl-1-carboxylic acid (anti[18F]F-FACBC, [11C]acetate and 1-(2-deoxy-2-[18F]fluoro-L-arabinofuranosyl)-5-methyluracil (-[18F]FMAU)(Scher, B.; et al. Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging 2007, 34, 45-53; Rinnab, L; et al. BJU Int 2007, 100, 786, 793; Reske, S. N.; et al. J Nucl Med 2006, 47, 1249-1254; Zophel, K.; Kotzerke, J. Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging 2004, 31, 756-759; Vees, H.; et al. BJU Int 2007, 99, 1415-1420; Larson, S. M.; et al. J Nucl Med 2004, 45, 366-373; Schuster, D. M.; et al. J Nucl Med 2007, 48, 56-63; Tehrani, O. S.; et al. J Nucl Med 2007, 48, 1436-1441). Each operates by a different mechanism and has certain advantages, e.g., low urinary excretion for [11C]choline, and disadvantages, such as the short physical half-life of positron-emitting radionuclides.


It is well known that tumors may express unique proteins associated with their malignant phenotype or may over-express normal constituent proteins in greater number than normal cells. The expression of distinct proteins on the surface of tumor cells offers the opportunity to diagnose and characterize disease by probing the phenotypic identity and biochemical composition and activity of the tumor.


Radioactive molecules that selectively bind to specific tumor cell surface proteins provide an attractive route for imaging and treating tumors under non-invasive conditions. A promising new series of low molecular weight imaging agents targets the prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) (Mease R. C. et al. Clin Cancer Res. 2008, 14, 3036-3043; Foss, C. A.; et al. Clin Cancer Res 2005, 11, 4022-4028; Pomper, M. G.; et al. Mol Imaging 2002, 1, 96-101; Zhou, J.; et al. Nat Rev Drug Discov 2005, 4, 015-1026; WO 2013/022797).


PSMA is a trans-membrane, 750 amino acid type II glycoprotein that has abundant and restricted expression on the surface of PCa, particularly in androgen-independent, advanced and metastatic disease (Schulke, N.; et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2003, 100, 12590-12595). The latter is important since almost all PCa become androgen independent over the time. PSMA possesses the criteria of a promising target for therapy (Schulke, N.; et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 2003, 100, 12590-12595). The PSMA gene is located on the short arm of chromosome 11 and functions both as a folate hydrolase and neuropeptidase. It has neuropeptidase function that is equivalent to glutamate carboxypeptidase II (GCPII), which is referred to as the “brain PSMA”, and may modulate glutamatergic transmission by cleaving /V-acetylaspartylglutamate (NAAG) to N-acetylaspartate (NAA) and glutamate (Nan, F.; et al. J Med Chem 2000, 43, 772-774). There are up to 106 PSMA molecules per cancer cell, further suggesting it as an ideal target for imaging and therapy with radionuclide-based techniques (Tasch, J.; et al. Crit Rev Immunol 2001, 21, 249-261). The radio-immunoconjugate of the anti-PSMA monoclonal antibody (mAb) 7E11, known as the PROSTASCINT® scan, is currently being used to diagnose prostate cancer metastasis and recurrence. However, this agent tends to produce images that are challenging to interpret (Lange, P. H. PROSTASCINT scan for staging prostate cancer. Urology 2001, 57, 402-406; Haseman, M. K.; et al. Cancer Biother Radiopharm 2000, 15, 131-140; Rosenthal, S. A.; et al. Tech Urol 2001, 7, 27-37). More recently, monoclonal antibodies have been developed that bind to the extracellular domain of PSMA and have been radiolabeled and shown to accumulate in PSMA-positive prostate tumor models in animals. However, diagnosis and tumor detection using monoclonal antibodies has been limited by the low permeability of the monoclonal antibody in solid tumors.


The selective targeting of cancer cells with radiopharmaceuticals, either for imaging or therapeutic purposes is challenging. A variety of radionuclides are known to be useful for radio-imaging or cancer radiotherapy, including 111In, 90Y, 68Ga, 177Lu, 99mTc, 123I and 131I. Recently it has been shown that some compounds containing a glutamate-urea-glutamate (GUG) or a glutamate-urea-lysine (GUL) recognition element linked to a radionuclide-ligand conjugate exhibit high affinity for PSMA.


In WO 2015/055318 new imaging agents with improved tumor targeting properties and pharmacokinetics were described. These compounds comprise a motif specifically binding to cell membranes of cancerous cells, wherein said motif comprises a prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA), that is the above mentioned glutamate-urea-lysine motif. The preferred molecules described in WO 2015/055318 further comprise a linker which binds via an amide bond to a carboxylic acid group of DOTA as chelator. Some of these compounds have been shown to be promising agents for the specific targeting of prostate tumors. The compounds were labeled with 177Lu (for therapy purposes) or 68Ga (for diagnostic purposes) and allow for visualization and targeting of prostate cancer for radiotherapy purposes.


However, there is still the need for alternative or improved ligands that interact with PSMA and carry appropriate radionuclides, such as 177Lu or 68Ga, for the detection, treatment and management of PSMA-expressing cancers, in particular prostate cancer.


Further, it is to be noted that none of the compounds described in WO 2015/055318 are described to form stable complexes with 64Cu and 67Cu. However, the pair 64Cu/67Cu has favorable properties, 64Cu is ideally suited for long term PET imaging and it allows to determine the dosimetry of 67Cu labeled radiotherapeutics. The therapeutic nuclide 67Cu is cyclotron produced and suited to GMP (good manufacturing practices) production. Its half-life allows for optimized repeated dosing, only a few days of hospitalization and reduced costs of waste management. Due to its characteristics t1/2=12.7 h, β+17.4%, Emax=0.656 MeV, β 39%, Emax=0.573 MeV), 64Cu is available in high quantities in comparison to 68Ga (t1/2=67.71 min, 88.9% β+) (Wadas T J, Wong E H, Weisman G R, Anderson C J. Copper chelation chemistry and its role in copper radiopharmaceuticals. Curr Pharm Des. 2007; 13:3-16.). The adequate half-life of 64Cu (12.7 h) in contrast to 68Ga (67.71 min) favours imaging at later time points and subsequent with increased tumor delineation (Lewis M R, Wang M, Axworthy D B, et al. In vivo evaluation of pretargeted 64Cu for tumor imaging and therapy. J Nucl Med. 2003; 44:1284-1292. 21. De Silva R A, Jain S, Lears K A, et al. Copper-64 radiolabeling and biological evaluation of bifunctional chelators for radiopharmaceutical development. Nucl Med Biol. 2012; 39:1099-1104.). A further major advantage of this radioisotope is that it may be used for diagnostics as well as for therapy. Thus, there is the need for PSMA ligands labeled with copper radionuclides.


Further, it is to be noted that in bone metastatic prostate cancer a survival benefit was observed after alpha-radiation therapy with the bone-seeker 223RaCl2, which could not be demonstrated for its beta-emitting analogue 89SrCl2 (Rubini G, Nicoletti A, Rubini D, Asabella A N. Radiometabolic treatment of bone-metastasizing cancer: from 186Re to 223Ra. Cancer Biother Radiopharm. 2014; 29:1-11]). It already had been demonstrated for patients with neuroendocrine tumors, that alpha-emitting 213Bi-DOTATOC can overcome resistance against beta-emitting 90Y/177Lu-DOTATOC [Kratochwil C, Giesel F L, Bruchertseifer F, et al. 213Bi-DOTATOC receptor-targeted alpha-radionuclide therapy induces remission in neuroendocrine tumors refractory to beta radiation: a first-in-human experience. Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging. 2014 November; 41(11):2106-19]. Consecutively, the interest in alpha-emitter based radionuclide therapy increases. Despite being interesting for research purposes, the short physical half-lives of 213Bi (t1/2=0.8 h), 212Bi (t1/2=1.0 h), 149Tb (t1/2=4.1 h) and 211At (t1/2=7.2 h) are challenging for a possible clinical application. On the other hand, long half-life alpha-emitters such as 227Th (t1/2=18.7 d), which might be necessary to cope with the slow pharmacokinetics of full-length antibodies, may accumulate in the environment and cause issues regarding waste disposal if applied in large scale, e.g. for treatment of epidemiologic important tumors. Intense radiation and considerably shorter path length are the main properties of alpha emitters. However, there are only few alpha emitters with an appropriate half-life suitable for clinical routine such as 212Pb.


Thus, there is still the need for PSMA ligands which form suitable complexes with alpha-emitting radionuclides.


Thus, the overall object of the present invention is to develop improved ligands that interact with PSMA and carry appropriate radionuclides which provide advantageous options for the detection, treatment and management of PSMA-expressing cancers, in particular prostate cancer.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The solution of said object is achieved by providing the embodiments characterized in the claims. The inventors found new compounds which are useful and advantageous radiopharmaceuticals and can be used in nuclear medicine as tracers, imaging agents and for the treatment of various disease states of PSMA-expressing cancers, in particular prostate cancer. These compounds are described in more detail below:


In particular, the present invention relates to a compound of formula (1)




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or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt or solvate thereof, wherein Y3 is O or S, wherein s, t, u and w are, independently of each other, 0 or 1, wherein i is an integer of from 1 to 3, wherein j is an integer of from 3 to 5, and wherein Z1, Z2 and Z3 are independently of each other, selected from the group consisting of —CO2H, —SO2H, —SO3H, —OSO3H, and —OPO3H2, R1 is —CH3 or H, preferably H, X is selected from the group consisting of, optionally substituted, alkylaryl, aryl, alkylheteroaryl and heteroaryl, Y1 and Y2 are, independently of each other, selected from the group consisting of, optionally substituted, aryl, alkylaryl, cycloalkyl, heterocycloalkyl, heteroaryl and alkylheteroaryl, and wherein A is a chelator residue having a structure selected from the group consisting of (Ia), (Ib) and (Ic)




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wherein R2, R3, R4 and R5 are, independently of each other, selected from the group consisting of H, —CH2—COOH and —CH2—C(═O)—NH2 or wherein R2 and R4 form a —(CH2)n— bridge with n being an integer of from 1 to 3, wherein n is preferably 2, and wherein r, v and q, are independently of each other, 0 or 1, with the proviso that in case u and w are 0, q and v are 0, and wherein


(A) u and w are 1, or


(B) u is 0 and w is 1, and wherein A is selected from (Ta) or (Tb), or


(C) A is not




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Further, the present invention relates to a complex comprising


(a) a radionuclide, and


(b) the compound, as described above or below, or a salt, solvate, metabolite or prodrug thereof.


Further, the present invention relates to a pharmaceutical composition comprising a compound, as described above or below, or a complex, as described above or below. Further, the present invention relates to a compound, as described above or below, or a complex, as described above or below, or a pharmaceutical composition, as described above or below, for use in treating, ameliorating or preventing PSMA expressing cancers and/or metastases thereof, especially prostate cancer and/or metastases thereof. Further, the present invention relates to a compound, as described above or below, or a complex, as described above or below, or a pharmaceutical composition, as described above or below, for use in diagnostics. In addition, the present invention relates to a compound, as described above or below, or a complex, as described above or below, or a pharmaceutical composition, as described above or below, for use in the diagnosis of cancer, in particular of PSMA expressing tumors and/or metastases thereof.


The term “PSMA expressing cancers and/or metastases thereof” as used within the meaning of the present invention relates to any cancer whose cancerous cells express Prostate Specific Membrane Antigen (PSMA) and the respective metastases thereof. Preferably, cancers (or cancer cells) that may be treated according to the invention are selected among prostate cancer, conventional renal cell cancers, cancers of the transitional cells of the bladder, testicular-embryonal cancers, neuroendocrine cancers, colon cancers, brain tumors and breast cancers. In particularly preferred aspects of the invention, said PSMA expressing cancer is prostate cancer or breast cancer, in particular prostate cancer.


As described above, the compound or the compound comprised in the complex of the present invention has the following structure:




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It has to be understood the compound or the compound comprised in the complex may be in the form of an anion, or a salt of the compound of formula (1).


The invention thus also relates to salt, in particular a pharmaceutically acceptable salt, of the compound of general formula (1) or the compound comprised in the complex. The invention also relates to solvates of these compounds, including the salts as well as the active metabolites thereof and, where appropriate, the tautomers thereof including prodrug formulations.


A “pharmaceutically acceptable salt” is a pharmaceutically acceptable, organic or inorganic acid or base salt of a compound of the invention. Representative pharmaceutically acceptable salts include, e.g., alkali metal salts, alkali earth metal salts, ammonium salts, water-soluble and water-insoluble salts, such as the acetate, carbonate, chloride, gluconate, glutamate, lactate, laurate, malate or tartrate.


The term “prodrug” refers to a precursor of a drug that is a compound which upon administration to a patient must undergo chemical conversion by metabolic processes before becoming an active pharmacological agent. Illustrative prodrugs of compounds in accordance with formula (1) are esters and amides, preferably alkyl esters of fatty acid esters. Prodrug formulations here comprise all substances which are formed by simple transformation including hydrolysis, oxidation or reduction either enzymatically, metabolically or in any other way. A suitable prodrug contains e.g. a substance of general formula (1) bound via an enzymatically cleavable linker (e.g. carbamate, phosphate, N-glycoside or a disulfide group) to a dissolution-improving substance (e.g. tetraethylene glycol, saccharides, formic acids or glucuronic acid, etc.). Such a prodrug of a compound according to the invention can be applied to a patient, and this prodrug can be transformed into a substance of general formula (1) so as to obtain the desired pharmacological effect.


Some compounds of formula (1) may be encompassed in form of stereoisomeric mixtures, such as racemic mixtures and/or mixtures of cis/trans isomers, or as single enantiomers, diastereomers and/or a specific cis/trans isomer, including all possible mixtures thereof.


According to the invention all chiral C-atoms shall have D- and/or L-configuration; also combinations within one compound shall be possible, i.e. some of the chiral C-atoms may be D- and others may be L-configuration. Most preferably, amino acid residues present in the compound have L-configuration.


The obtained compounds can be optionally separated by known methods (e.g. Allinger, N. L. und Elliel E. L. in “Topics in Stereochemistry” Vol. 6, Wiley Interscience, 1971) in their enantiomers and/or diasteromers. One possible method of enantiomeric separation is the use of chromatography.


The Urea Backbone:


Compound (1) comprises an urea building block (1A). In this urea building block (1A) of compound (1)




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Z1, Z2 and Z3 are, independently of each other, selected from the group consisting of CO2H, —SO2H, —SO3H, —OSO3H, and —OPO3H2, more preferably, at least one of, more preferably all of, Z1, Z2 and Z3 are —CO2H.


It is to be understood that the building block (1A) may be present in any stereoisomeric form, preferably, however, (1A) has the structure (1Aa):




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Thus, preferably, the compound of the invention and the compound comprised in the complex of the invention, has the structure




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Integer i an integer j are as described above.


Preferably i is 2. Thus, the present invention also relates to a compound of formula (1), preferably (1a), and to the compound comprised in the complex of the invention, wherein i is 2.


Preferably, j is 4. Thus, the present invention also relates to a compound of formula (1), preferably (1a), and to the compound comprised in the complex of the invention, wherein j is 4.


R1 is preferably H.


The urea building block (1Aa), thus most preferably has the structure (1Aa_1)




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Residue X and Building Block (JB):


If s is 1, the compound of formula (1) comprises the building block (1B)




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As described, above, in this building block, X preferably comprises a residue selected from the group consisting of naphtyl, phenyl, biphenyl, indolyl and benzothiazolyl. Preferably, X is a naphtyl, alkyl-naphtyl, phenyl, benzyl, biphenyl, alkyl-biphenyl, indolyl, alkyl-indolyl, benzothiazolyl or alkyl-benzothiazolyl group.


Within the meaning of the present invention, the terms naphtyl, phenyl, biphenyl, indolyl and benzothiazolyl, encompass groups which are further substituted by one or more suitable substituents. The term “substituted” as used in this context of the present invention preferably refers to groups being substituted in any position by one or more substituents, preferably by 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6 substituents, more preferably by 1, 2, or 3 substituents. If two or more substituents are present, each substituent may be the same or may be different from the at least one other substituent. Preferably, the groups are unsubstituted.


Within the meaning of the present invention, the term “alkyl” relates to non-branched alkyl residues and branched alkyl residues. The term also encompasses alkyl groups which are further substituted by one or more suitable substituents. The term “substituted alkyl” as used in this context of the present invention preferably refers to alkyl groups being substituted in any position by one or more substituents, preferably by 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6 substituents, more preferably by 1, 2, or 3 substituents.


More preferably, the residue X is selected from the group consisting of




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wherein these groups may be suitably substituted. Preferably, these groups are not substituted.


Most preferably, X, if present, is




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The building block (1B), if present, thus preferably has the following structure:




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The Group Y1 and Building Block (IC).


If t is 1, the compound of formula (1) comprises the building block (1C)




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As described, Y1 is selected from the group consisting of aryl, alkylaryl, cycloalkyl, heterocycloalkyl, heteroaryl and alkylheteroaryl.


The term “aryl”, as used in the context of the present invention, means optionally substituted aryl groups, i.e. in particular optionally substituted, 5- and 6-membered aromatic rings, and substituted or unsubstituted polycyclic aromatic groups (aryl groups), for example tricyclic or bicyclic aryl groups. Optionally substituted phenyl groups or naphthyl groups may be mentioned as examples. Polycyclic aromatic groups can also contain non-aromatic rings.


The term “heteroaryl”, as used in the context of the present invention, means means optionally substituted heteroaryl groups, i.e. in particular optionally substituted, 5- and 6-membered aromatic rings, and substituted or unsubstituted polycyclic aromatic groups, for example tricyclic or bicyclic aryl groups, containing one or more, for example I to 4, such as 1, 2, 3, or 4, heteroatoms in the ring system. If more than one heteroatom is present in the ring system, the at least two heteroatoms that are present can be identical or different. Suitable heteroaryl groups are known to the skilled person.


The following, optionally substituted, heteroaryl residues may be mentioned, as non limiting examples: benzodioxolyl, pyrrolyl, furanyl, thiophenyl, thiazolyl, isothiaozolyl, imidazolyl, triazolyl, tetrazolyl, pyrazolyl, oxazolyl, isoxazolyl, pyridinyl, pyrazinyl, pyridazinyl, benzoxazolyl, benzodioxazolyl, benzothiazolyl, benzoimidazolyl, benzothiophenyl, methylenedioxyphenylyl, napthridinyl, quinolinyl, isoqunilyinyl, indolyl, benzofuranyl, purinyl, benzofuranyl, deazapurinyl, pyridazinyl and indolizinyl.


The term “alkylaryl” or “alkylheteroaryl” as used within the meaning of the present invention, refers to a group wherein the aryl group or heteroaryl is linked via an alkyl group to the respective rest of the building block. In case of X that is e.g. to the C-backbone, thus “alkylaryl” in this case refers to the group -Alkyl-Aryl and “alkylheteroaryl” refers to the group -Alkyl-Heteroalkyl. In case of Y1,) the aryl group or heteroaryl is linked via an alkyl group to the carbonyl group, i.e. thus “alkylaryl” in this case refers to the group -Alkyl-Aryl- and “alkylheteroaryl to the group -Alkyl-Heteroalkyl-. In case of Y2, the aryl group or heteroaryl is linked via an alkyl group to the NH group, .e. thus “alkylaryl” in this case refers to the group -Alkyl-Aryl- and “alkylheteroaryl to the group -Alkyl-Heteroalkyl-.


The term “cycloalkyl” means, in the context of the invention, optionally substituted, cyclic alkyl residues, wherein they can be monocyclic or polycyclic groups. Optionally substituted cyclohexyl may be mentioned as a preferred example of a cycloalkyl residue.


The term “heterocycloalkyl”, as used in the context of the present invention, means optionally substituted, cyclic alkyl residues, which have at least one heteroatom, such as O, N or S in the ring, wherein they can be monocyclic or polycyclic groups.


The terms “substituted cycloalkyl residue” or “cycloheteroalkyl”, as used in the context of the present invention, mean cycloalkyl residues or cycloheteroalkyl residues, in which at least one H has been replaced with a suitable substituent.


Preferably, Y1 is a cycloalkyl or heterocycloalkyl group, more preferably a cycloalkyl group, more preferably




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The building block (1C), if present, thus preferably has the following structure;




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It is to be understood that this structure includes any possible stereoisomers, such as cis/trans isomers. Preferably, the group




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is present as the trans isomer. The building block (1C), if present, thus preferably has the following structure;




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The Group Y3


As described above, Y3 is preferably O or S.


The Radionucleotide


Depending on whether the compounds of the invention are to be used as radio-imaging agents or radio-pharmaceuticals different radionuclides are complexed to the chelator.


Illustrative radionuclides include, for example, 89Zr, 44Sc, 111In, 90Y 66Ga, 67Ga, 68Ga, 177Lu, 99mTc, 60Cu, 61Cu, 62Cu, 64Cu, 66Cu 67Cu 149Tb 152Tb 153Sm, 155Tb 161Tb, 153Gd, 55Gd, 57Gd, 213Bi, 225Ac, 230U, 223Ra, 165Er, radionuclides of Fe (such as 52Fe and 59Fe) and radionuclides of Pb (such as 203Pb and 212Pb, 211 Pb, 213 Pb, 214Pb, 209Pb, 198Pb, 197Pb).


Preferably, the radionuclide is selected from the group consisting of 111In, 90Y 68Ga, 177Lu, 153Gd, 155Gd, 23Bi, 225Ac, 60Cu, 61Cu, 62Cu, 64Cu, 66Cu, 67Cu, radionuclides of Fe (such as 52Fe and 59Fe) and radionuclides of Pb (such as 203Pb and 212Pb, 211 Pb, 213 Pb, 214Pb, 209Pb, 198Pb, 197Pb).


The radionuclides of Pb are more preferably 203Pb and 212Pb.


The radionuclides of Cu are more preferably 64Cu and 67Cu.


The complexes of the compounds according of the invention may contain one or more radionuclides, preferably one radionuclide. These radionuclides are preferably suitable for use as radio-imaging agents or as therapeutics for the treatment of proliferating cells, for example, PSMA expressing cancer cells, in particular PSMA-expressing prostate cancer cells. According to the present invention they are called “metal complexes” or “radiopharmaceuticals”.


Preferred imaging methods are positron emission tomography (PET) or single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT).


Embodiment (A)

According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, u and w are 1. According to this embodiment, the compound of the invention thus has the following structure.




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In this case, Y is most preferably S. Thus, the compound of the invention has more preferably the following structure.




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As described above, Y2 is selected from the group consisting of aryl, alkylaryl, cycloalkyl, heterocycloalkyl, heteroaryl and alkylheteroaryl. More preferably, Y2 is an aryl group, more preferably, Y2 comprises an, optionally substituted, phenyl ring, and even more preferably Y2 is




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wherein R6, R7, R8 and R9 are, independently of each other, H or alkyl, alkenyl, alkinyl, alkyloxy, alkanoyloxy, aryl, heteroaryl, halogen, hydroxyl, mercapto, nitrile, amine, or in each case optionally substituted alkyl, alkenyl, alkinyl, alkyloxy, alkylthio, alkanoyloxy, cycloalkyl, benzyloxy or aryl, most preferably R6, R7, R8 and R9 are, independently of each other, alkyl or H, more preferably R6, R7, R8 and R9 are H.


Thus, the compound of the invention has preferably the following structure.




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It has been surprisingly found that with such compounds, the interactions with PSMA may be optimized. With the compounds according to this invention improved tumor-to-non-target tissue accumulation and tissue values can be reached and an improved distribution pattern in the non-target tissues can be obtained.


Moreover, the chelators applied in accordance with this invention allow the stable conjugation of radionuclides that can not be used to target PSMA expressing tumors with the actually known tracers.


As described above, in general, the chelator is selected from the group consisting of (Ia), (Ib) and (Ic).


In case of embodiment A, described above and below, integer r is preferably 0. More preferably, A is a chelator selected from the group consisting of




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Thus, the present invention also relates to a compound, as described above and below, as well as to a complex comprising said compound, the compound having the following structure.




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more preferably having the following structure:




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wherein A is a chelator selected from the group consisting of




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Preferred compounds according to this embodiment have a structure selected from the group consisting of CA007, CA008*, CA009*, CA029* and CA030* (see Table 1A), wherein the compounds CA007, CA008* and CA009* are even more preferred. It is to be understood that if a stereocenter in the respective shown structure in Table 1A is not specified, this shall mean that all respective stereoisomers shall be encompassed, in isolated form as well in form of a mixture of the respective stereoisomers. Thus, the compounds CA008*, CA009*, CA029* and CA030* may be present as single stereoisomers or as mixture of stereoisomers. More preferably, according to this embodiment, the compound have a structure selected from the group consisting of CA007, CA008, CA009, CA029 and CA030 (see Table 1B), wherein the compounds CA007, CA008 and CA009 are particularly preferred.


It has been surprisingly shown that these compounds show a high binding affinity for PSMA and are effectively internalized.


Embodiment (B)

According to another preferred embodiment of the invention, u is 0 and w is 1. According to this embodiment, the compound of the invention thus has the following structure.




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According to this embodiment, A has the structure (Ia) or the structure (Ib).




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As described above, Y2 is selected from the group consisting of aryl, alkylaryl, cycloalkyl, heterocycloalkyl, heteroaryl and alkylheteroaryl. More preferably, Y2 is an aryl or heteroaryl group, more preferably, Y2 comprises an, optionally substituted, phenyl ring, and even more preferably Y2 is




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wherein R6, R7, R8 and R9 are, independently of each other H or alkyl, most preferably H.


Thus, the present invention also relates to a compound, as described above and below, as well as to a complex comprising said compound, the compound having the following structure:




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wherein A has the structure (Ta) or the structure (Ib). More preferably, in this case, Y3 is O. As preferred groups A in this context, the following groups are mentioned:




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More preferably, A is selected from the group consisting of




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and most preferably A is




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Preferred compounds according to this embodiment have a structure selected from the group consisting of CA001, CA002*, CA003*, CA005*, CA006*, CA007, CA008*, CA009*, CA023*, CA025*, CA026*, CA027, CA028* and CA029* (The structures of these compounds are depicted in Table 1A).


More preferably, the compound has a structure selected from the group consisting of CA007, CA008* and CA009* (The structures of these compounds are depicted in Table 1A). It is to be understood that if a stereocenter in the respective shown structure in Table 1A is not specified, this shall mean that all respective stereoisomers shall be encompassed, in isolated form as well in form of a mixture of the respective stereoisomers. Thus, the compounds CA002*, CA003*, CA005*, CA006*, CA008*, CA009*, CA023*, CA025*, CA026*, CA027, CA028* and CA029* may be present as single stereoisomers or as mixture of stereoisomers. More preferably, according to this embodiment, the compound have a structure selected from the group consisting of CA001, CA002, CA003, CA005, CA006, CA007, CA008, CA009, CA023, CA025, CA026, CA027, CA028 and CA029 (The structures of these compounds are depicted in Table IB), with compounds CA007, CA008 and CA009 being particularly preferred.


It has been surprisingly shown that these compounds show a high binding affinity for PSMA and are effectively internalized.


Embodiment (C)

According to another preferred embodiment of the invention A is not




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Preferably, according to this embodiment, A is selected from the group consisting of




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It has surprisingly been found, that the compounds of the invention comprising these chelator building blocks form stable complexes with radionuclides of lead and/or copper and have advantageous tumor targeting properties. The novel compounds provide the possibility to fine tune the pharmacokinetic profile in accordance with the respective radionuclide applied. Furthermore, the compounds allow the stable labelling with specific radionuclides.


Copper Binding Compounds:


In case, the compounds are to be used as copper binding PSMA ligands, as mentioned above, A is preferably selected from the group consisting of.




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It has surprisingly been found that with these compounds stable and effective complexes with copper radionuclides can be formed. Thus, the present invention also relates to a compound, as described above or below, or a complex, as described above or below, wherein A is




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and wherein the radionuclide is a radionuclide of copper, more preferably 64Cu and/or 67Cu.


As example, the following copper binding compounds should be mentioned CA001, CA002*, CA003*, CA005*, CA006*, CA022*, CA023*, CA024*, CA025* and CA026* (the structures of these compounds are depicted in Table 1A).1). More preferred examples are CA001, CA002, CA003, CA005, CA006, CA022, CA023, CA024, CA025 and CA026 (see Table 1B). It is to be understood that if a stereocenter in the respective shown structure in Table 1A is not specified, this shall mean that all respective stereoisomers shall be encompassed, in isolated form as well in form of a mixture of the respective stereoisomers. Thus, the compounds CA002*, CA003*, CA005*, CA006*, CA022*, CA023*, CA024*, CA025* and CA026*may be present as single stereoisomers or as mixture of stereoisomers.


More preferably, in case the compounds are to be used with copper as radionuclide, the compounds are selected from the group consisting of CA003*, CA006*, CA022* and CA023* (the respective chemical structures are depicted in Table 1A).), preferably of the group CA003, CA006, CA022 and CA023 (see Table 1B)


More preferably, the compound is CA003* (see Table 1A).), mots preferably CA003 (see Table 1B)


It has surprisingly been found that with these compounds two yet unmet needs of PSMA targeting can be fulfilled a) a highly specific enrichment in the tumor is achieved with favourable biodistribution characteristics—in particular a significantly improved kidney clearance and b) the possibility to use isotopes of copper and lead two metals of which preferred radioisotopes exist.


Lead Binding Compounds:


In case, the compounds are to be used, e.g., with lead as radionuclide, as mentioned above, A is preferably selected from the group consisting of




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It has surprisingly been found that with such compounds favourable complexes with lead may be formed which show advantageous PSMA targeting properties.


Thus, the present invention also relates to a compound, as described above or below, or a complex, as described above or below, wherein A is




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and wherein the radionuclide is a radionuclide of lead, more preferably 203Pb or 212Pb.


As example, the following lead binding compounds the following compounds should be mentioned CA007, CA008, CA009, CA010, CA011 and CA012 (the structures of these compounds are depicted in Table 1A), preferably CA007, CA008*, CA009*, CA010*, CAO 1* and CA012*. More preferably, the compound is CA009* or CA012*, most preferably CA009 or CA012. Thus, the present invention relates to a compound or a complex, as described above, wherein the compound has the structure CA009* or CA012 (Table A1) more preferably CA009 or CA012 (see Table 1B.), and wherein the radionuclide is preferably a radionuclide of lead, more preferably 203Pb or 212Pb.


It has surprisingly been found that these compounds presented a high stability in human serum for 48 h. Further, the compounds revealed a high affinity to inhibit PSMA.


Moreover, the 203Pb-labeled compounds showed high rates of specific internalization in the PSMA positive cell line.


Pharmaceutical Composition


As described above, the present invention also relates to a pharmaceutical composition comprising a compound, as described above or below, or a complex, as described above or below. It is to be understood that the pharmaceutical compositions comprise therapeutically effective amounts of the compound and/or the complex, respectively. The composition may further comprise at least one organic or inorganic solid or liquid and/or at least one pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.


The phrase “pharmaceutically acceptable” is employed herein to refer to those compounds, material, compositions, and/or dosage forms which are, within the scope of sound medical judgment, suitable for use in contact with the tissues of a patient without excessive toxicity, irritation, allergic response, or other problem or complication, commensurate with a reasonable benefit/risk ratio.


A “patient” includes an animal, such as a human, monkey, cow, horse, cat or dog. The animal can be a mammal such as a non-primate and a primate (e.g., monkey and human). In one embodiment, a patient is a human being.


In general, the compound of formula (1) or the pharmaceutical composition thereof, may be administered orally or via a parenteral route, usually injection or infusion.


A “parenteral administration route” means modes of administration other than enteral and topical administration, usually by injection, and includes, without limitation, intravenous, intramusclular, intraarterial, intrathecal, intracapsular, intraorbital, intracardiac, intradermal, intraperitoneal, transtracheal, subcutaneous, subcuticular, intraarticluare, subcapsular, subarachnoid, intraspinal and intrasternal injection and infusion.


The dosage (referring to the amount of carrier molecule) of the compounds according to the invention is determined by the physician on the basis of the patient-specific parameters, such as age, weight, sex, severity of the disease, etc. The dosage depends on the mode of application: in general, the compounds used for molecular imaging purposes are applied in tracer amounts—i.e. by using a total dose of 1 to 100 nmol per patient the preferred dose being 5 to 20 nmol per patient. For therapeutic application (endoradiotherapy) higher doses are required to achieve the radiation quantity absorbed dose (gray) numbers required to cause a therapeutic effect. For therapeutic applications the doses preferably range from 0.1 nmol/kg to 10 nmol/kg body weight, preferably from 0.2 to 5 nmol/kg body weight and most preferably from 0.5 to 2 nmol/kg body weight. Corresponding to the kind of administration, the medicament is suitably formulated, e.g. in the form of solutions or suspensions, simple tablets or dragees, hard or soft gelatine capsules, suppositories, ovules, preparations for injection, which are prepared according to common galenic methods.


The compounds according to the invention can be formulated, where appropriate, together with further active substances and with excipients and carriers common in pharmaceutical compositions, e.g.—depending on the preparation to be produced—talcum, gum arabic, lactose, starch, magnesium stearate, cocoa butter, aqueous and non-aqueous carriers, fatty bodies of animal or vegetable origin, paraffin derivatives, glycols (in particular polyethylene glycol), various plasticizers, dispersants or emulsifiers, pharmaceutically compatible gases (e.g. air, oxygen, carbon dioxide, etc.), preservatives.


In order to produce liquid preparations, additives, such as sodium chloride solution, ethanol, sorbitol, glycerine, olive oil, almond oil, propylene glycol or ethylene glycol, can be used. When solutions for infusion or injection are used, they are preferably aqueous solutions or suspensions, it being possible to produce them prior to use, e.g. from lyophilized preparations which contain the active substance as such or together with a carrier, such as mannitol, lactose, glucose, albumin and the like. The readymade solutions are sterilized and, where appropriate, mixed with excipients, e.g. with preservatives, stabilizers, emulsifiers, solubilizers, buffers and/or salts for regulating the osmotic pressure. The sterilization can be obtained by sterile filtration using filters having a small pore size according to which the composition can be lyophilized, where appropriate. Small amounts of antibiotics can also be added to ensure the maintenance of sterility. The phrases effective amount” or “therapeutically-effective amount” as used herein means that amount of a compound, material, or composition comprising a compound of the invention, or other active ingredient which is effective for producing some desired therapeutic effect in at least a sub-population of cells in a patient at a reasonable benefit/risk ratio applicable to any medical treatment. A therapeutically effective amount with respect to a compound of the invention means that amount of therapeutic agent alone, or in combination with other therapies, that provides a therapeutic benefit in the treatment of prevention of a disease. Used in connection with a compound of the invention, the term can encompass an amount that improves overall therapy, reduces or avoids symptoms or causes of disease, or enhances the therapeutic efficacy of or synergies with another therapeutic agent.


Further, the present invention also relates to a compound, as described above or below, or a complex, as described above or below, or a pharmaceutical composition, as described for use in treating, ameliorating or preventing a cell proliferative disease or disorder, in particular prostate cancer and/or metastases thereof.


Further, the present invention also relates to a compound, as described above or below, or a complex, as described above or below, or a pharmaceutical composition, for use in diagnostics.


Further, the present invention also relates to as described above or below, or a complex, as described above or below, or a pharmaceutical composition, for use in the diagnosis of cancer, in particular of prostate cancer and/or metastases thereof.


As used herein, the terms “treating” or “treatment” is intended to encompass also diagnosis, prophylaxis, prevention, therapy and cure.


The terms, “prevent”, “preventing,” and “prevention” refer to the prevention of the onset, recurrence, or spread of the disease in a patient resulting from the administration of a prophylactic or therapeutic agent.


Preferably, as described above or below, or a complex, as described above or below, or a pharmaceutical composition, are used for in vivo imaging and radiotherapy. Suitable pharmaceutical compositions may contain a radio imaging agent, or a radiotherapeutic agent that has a radionuclide either as an element, i.e. radioactive iodine, or a radioactive metal chelate complex of the compound of formula (la) and/or (lb) in an amount sufficient for imaging, together with a pharmaceutically acceptable radiological vehicle. The radiological vehicle should be suitable for injection or aspiration, such as human serum albumin; aqueous buffer solutions, e.g., tris(hydromethyl)-aminomethane (and its salts), phosphate, citrate, bicarbonate, etc; sterile water physiological saline; and balanced ionic solutions containing chloride and or dicarbonate salts or normal blood plasma cautions such as calcium potassium, sodium and magnesium.


The concentration of the imaging agent or the therapeutic agent in the radiological vehicle should be sufficient to provide satisfactory imaging. For example, when using an aqueous solution, the dosage ranges from 0.1 to 300 millicuries this broad range is caused by the fact that alpha emitting isotopes exert very strong cytotoxic effects and are therefore applied in low doses such as 0.135 mCi225Ac per therapy cycle in case of actinium labeled PSMA-617. In case of beta-emitting radioisotopes such as 77Lu doses of up to 216 mCi are typically applied in one therapy cycle. These doses can be determined by the skilled person. The actual dose administered to a patient for imaging or therapeutic purposes, however, is determined by the physician administering treatment. The imaging agent or therapeutic agent should be administered so as to remain in the patient for about 1 hour to 10 days, although both longer and shorter time periods are acceptable. Therefore, convenient ampoules containing 1 to 10 mL of aqueous solution may be prepared.


Imaging may be carried out in the normal manner, for example by injecting a sufficient amount of the imaging composition to provide adequate imaging and then scanning with a suitable imaging or scanning machine, such as a tomograph or gamma camera. In certain embodiments, a method of imaging a region in a patient includes the steps of: (i) administering to a patient a diagnostically effective amount of a compound complexed with a radionuclide; exposing a region of the patient to the scanning device; and (ii) obtaining an image of the region of the patient. In certain embodiments of the region imaged is the head or thorax. In other embodiments, the compounds and complexes of formula 1(a) and/or (lb) target the PSMA protein.


Thus, in some embodiments, a method of imaging tissue such as spleen tissue, kidney tissue, or PSMA-expressing tumor tissue is provided including contacting the tissue with a complex synthesized by contacting a radionuclide and a formula (la) and/or formula (lb) compound. The amount of the compound of the present invention, or a formulation comprising a complex of the compound, or its salt, solvate, stereoisomer, or tautomer that is administered to a patient depends on several physiological factors. These factors are known by the physician, including the nature of imaging to be carried out, tissue to be targeted for imaging or therapy and the body weight and medical history of the patient to be imaged or treated using a radiopharmaceutical.


Accordingly in another aspect, the invention provides a method for treating a patient by administering to a patient a therapeutically effective amount of a complex, as described above, to treat a patient suffering from a cell proliferative disease or disorder. Specifically, the cell proliferative disease or disorder to be treated or imaged using a compound, pharmaceutical composition or radiopharmaceutical in accordance with this invention is a cancer, for example, prostate cancer and/or prostate cancer metastasis in e.g. lung, liver, kidney, bones, brain, spinal cord, bladder, etc.


The synthesis of the compounds of the present invention is described in detail in the example section


Summarizing the findings of the present invention, the following embodiments are particularly preferred:

    • 1. A compound of formula (1)




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      • or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt or solvate thereof,

      • wherein Y3 is O or S,

      • wherein s, t, u and w are, independently of each other, 0 or 1,

      • wherein i is an integer of from 1 to 3,

      • wherein j is an integer of from 3 to 5,

      • and wherein Z1, Z2 and Z3 are independently of each other, selected from the group consisting of CO2H, —SO2H, —SO3H, —OSO3H, and —OPO3H2,

      • R1 is —CH3 or H, preferably H

      • X is selected from the group consisting of, optionally substituted, alkylaryl (-akyl-aryl), aryl, alkylheteroaryl (-akly-heteroaryl) and heteroaryl,

      • Y1 and Y2 are independently, of each other, selected from the group consisting of, optionally substituted, aryl, alkylaryl (-alkyl-aryl), cycloalkyl, heterocycloalkyl, heteroaryl and alkylheteroaryl (-akly-heteroaryl),

      • and wherein A is a chelator residue having a structure selected from the group consisting of (Ia), (Ib) and (Ic)









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      • wherein R2, R3, R4 and R5 are, independently of each other, selected from the group consisting of H, —CH2—COOH and —CH2—C(═O)—NH2 or wherein R2 and R4 form a —(CH2)n-bridge with n being an integer of from 1 to 3, wherein n is preferably 2, and wherein r, v and q, are independently of each other, 0 or 1, with the proviso that in case u and w are 0, q and v are 0, and

      • (A) wherein u and w are 1, or

      • (B) wherein u is 0 and w is 1, and wherein A is selected from (Ia) or (Ib), or

      • (C) A is not









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    • 2. The compound of embodiment 1, wherein X preferably comprises a residue selected from the group consisting of, optionally substituted, naphtyl, phenyl, biphenyl, indolyl and benzothiazolyl, more preferably, wherein X is selected from the group consisting of







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    • 3. The compound of embodiment 1, wherein X is







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    • 4. The compound of any one of embodiments 1 to 3, wherein Z1, Z2 and Z3 are —CO2H.

    • 5. The compound of any one of embodiments 1 to 4, wherein R1 is H.

    • 6. The compound of any one of embodiments 1 to 5, wherein Y1 is







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    • 7. The compound of any one of embodiments 1 to 6, wherein i is 2 and j is 4, and wherein the compound has preferably the structure (1a)







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    • 8. The compound of any one of embodiments 1 to 7, wherein u and w are 1.

    • 9. The compound of embodiment 8, wherein Y3 is S.

    • 10. The compound of embodiment 8 or 9, wherein Y2 is







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      • and wherein R6, R7, R8 and R9 are, independently of each other H or alkyl, preferably H.



    • 11. The compound of any one of embodiments 8 to 10, wherein r is preferably 0.

    • 12. The compound of any one of embodiments 8 to 11, wherein A is a chelator selected from the group consisting of







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    • 13. The compound of any one of embodiments 8 to 12, having a structure selected from the group consisting of CA007, CA008*, CA009*, CA029* and CA030* (see Table 1A), preferably a structure selected from the group consisting of CA007, CA008, CA009, CA029 and CA030 (see Table 1B.).

    • 14. The compound of any one of claims 8 to 12, having a structure selected from the group consisting of CA007, CA008* and CA009*(see Table 1A), preferably a structure selected from the group consisting of CA007, CA008 and CA009 (see Table IB).

    • 15. The compound of any one of embodiments 1 to 7, wherein u is 0 and w is 1, and wherein A is selected from (Ta) or (Ib).

    • 16. The compound embodiment 15, wherein Y2 is an, optionally substituted, aryl or heteroaryl group.

    • 17. The compound of embodiment 16 or 17, wherein Y2 is







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      • and wherein R6, R/, R8 and R9 are, independently of each other H or alkyl, preferably H.



    • 18. The compound of any one of embodiment 15 to 17, wherein A is selected from the group consisting of







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    • 19. The compound of any one of embodiments 15 to 18, wherein A is selected from the group consisting of







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    • 20. The compound of any one of embodiments 15 to 19, wherein A is







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    • 21. The compound of any one of embodiments 15 to 20, having a structure selected from the group consisting of CA001, CA002*, CA003*, CA007, CA008*, CA009*, CA022*, CA023*, CA025*, CA026*, CA027, CA028* and CA029* (see Table 1A), preferably a structure selected from the group consisting of CA001, CA002, CA003, CA007, CA008, CA009, CA022, CA023, CA025, CA026, CA027, CA028 and CA029 (see Table 1B).

    • 22. The compound of any one of embodiments 15 to 21, having a structure selected from the group consisting of CA007, CA008* and CA009*, preferably a structure selected from the group consisting of CA007, CA008 and CA009 (Table 1B).

    • 23. The compound of any one embodiments 1 to 7, wherein A is not







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    • 24. The compound of embodiment 23, wherein A is selected from the group consisting of







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    • 25. Complex comprising
      • (a) a radionuclide, and
      • (b) the compound of any one claims 1 to 24 or a salt thereof.

    • 26. The complex of embodiment 25, wherein, the radionuclide is selected from the group consisting 89Zr, 44Sc, 111In, 90Y, 66Ga, 67Ga, 68Ga, 177Lu, 99mTc, 60Cu, 61Cu, 62Cu, 64Cu, 66cu, 67cu, 149Tb, 152Tb, 155Tb, 161Tb, 153Sm, 153Gd, 55Gd, 57Gd, 213Bi, 225Ac, 230U, 223Ra 165Er, radionuclides of Fe (such as 52Fe and 59Fe) and radionuclides of Pb (such as 203Pb and 212Pb, 211 Pb, 213 Pb, 214Pb, 209Pb, 98Pb, 197Pb).

    • 27. The complex of embodiment 25, wherein the radionuclide is a radioactive nuclide of lead and A is







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    • 28. The complex of embodiment 27, wherein (b) is a compound having a structure selected from the group consisting of CA007, CA008, CA009, CA010 and CA011 or salts thereof.

    • 29. The complex of embodiment 25, wherein the radionuclide is a radioactive nuclide of copper and A is







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    • 30. A pharmaceutical composition comprising a compound of any of embodiment 1 to 24 or a complex of any one of claims 25 to 29.

    • 31. A compound of any one of embodiments 1 to 24 or a complex of any one of embodiments 25 to 29 or a pharmaceutical composition of embodiment 30 for use in treating, ameliorating or preventing PSMA-expressing cancer and/or metastases thereof, in particular prostate cancer and/or metastases thereof.

    • 32. Compound of any one of embodiments 1 to 24 or a complex of any one of embodiments 25 to 29 or a pharmaceutical composition of embodiment 30 for use in diagnostics.

    • 33. Compound of any one of embodiments e 1 to 24 or a complex of any one of embodiments 25 to 29 or a pharmaceutical composition of embodiment 30 for use in the diagnosis of cancer, such as PSMA-expressing cancer and/or metastases thereof, in particular prostate cancer and/or metastases thereof.





All references cited throughout this specification are herewith incorporated by reference with respect to the specifically mentioned disclosure content as well as in their entireties.





FIGURES


FIG. 1: Table 1A: Overview over preferred compounds. It is to be understood that if a stereocenter in the respective shown structure is not specified, this shall mean that all respective stereoisomers shall be encompassed, in isolated form as well in form of a mixture of the respective stereoisomers, Table 1B: Overview over very preferred compounds.



FIG. 2: Reaction scheme for the synthesis of the PSMA-chelator conjugates (a) triphosgene, DIPEA, CH2Cl2, 0° C.; (b) H-Lys(Alloc)-2CT-resin, CH2Cl2 (c) Pd[P(C6H5)3]4, morpholine, CH2Cl2; (d) Fmoc-2-Nal-OH, HBTU, DIPEA, DMF; (e) 20% piperidine, DMF; (f) trans-4-(Fmoc-aminomethyl)-cyclohexanecarboxylic acid, HBTU, DIPEA, DMF; (g) 20% piperidine, DMF; (h) chelator, HBTU (if necessary), DIPEA, DMF; (i) 95% TFA, 2.5% H2O, 2.5% TIPS.



FIG. 3: PSMA inhibition potencies and specific internalization values of the novel PSMA ligands labeled with the nuclide specified in the table. Competitive cell binding was performed using the PSMA-positive C4-2 cell line. The new ligands showed good inhibition potencies with Kl in the low nanomolar range and partially higher internalization values (specific lysate) than PSMA-617.



FIG. 4: A. PET scan and time-activity curves of C4-2 tumour bearing mice showing biodistribution of 64Cu-PSMA-617, 64Cu-CA003 and 64Cu-CA023. 64Cu-PSMA-617 shows high accumulation in the tumor and kidneys but also in the liver. A. Visualization of biodistribution of 64Cu-PSMA-617, 64Cu-CA003 and 64Cu-CA023 at different time points (0-20 min, 40-60 min, 2 h, 48 h). B. Time-activity curve of dynamic PET scan (0-60 min) of C4-2 tumour bearing mice showing biodistribution of 64Cu-PSMA-617 and 64Cu-CA003. Standard-uptake-values (SUV) for tumor and liver show higher uptake of 64Cu-PSMA-617 in the liver than in the tumor, contrary to 64Cu-CA003.



FIG. 5: Maximum standard-uptake values (mSUV) of 64Cu-PSMA-617, 64Cu-CA003 and 64Cu-CA023 in PET images of C4-2 tumour bearing mice at different time points (0-48 h). 64Cu-CA003 shows high accumulation in the tumor and kidneys, 64Cu-CA023shows high accumulation in the tumor and fast clearance from the kidneys.



FIG. 6A: Accumulation of 64Cu-CA003 in dissected organs of interest in C4-2 tumour bearing mice confirms tumor specificity and fast clearance from the kidneys.



FIG. 6B: Accumulation of 64Cu-CA023 in dissected organs of interest in C4-2 tumour bearing mice confirms tumor specificity and fast clearance from the kidneys FIG. 6C: Organ distribution of 0.025 nmol of 64Cu-CA003 at the time points: 10 min, 1 h, 4 h, 24 h and 72 h after injection. Values are expressed as % ID/g of tissue±standard deviation; n=3 for all tissues.



FIG. 6D: In a blockade experiment (B), the radiotracer 64Cu-CA003 (0.030 nmol) was injected at the same time as 2 mg of PSMA-617 per kilogram of body weight. Values are expressed as % ID/g of tissue±standard deviation; n=3 for all tissues.



FIG. 7: 64Cu-CA003 (200 MBq, 0.5 nmol) PET/CT maximum intensity projections of a patient at 2 h (A) and 20 h post injection (B). The red arrows point to selected right shoulder soft-tissue infiltration from scapula origin, lung, bone and lymph-node metastases increased in contrast over time. The hepatobiliary clearance causes hot-spots inside the intestine; cross-sectional slices (C) are mandatory to avoid false-positive readings.



FIG. 8: Planar scintigraphic imaging of different 203Pb-labeled compounds A) at 1 h after tail vein injection and (B) time course of the distribution of 203Pb-CA012 in BALB/c nu/nu C4-2 tumor bearing mice. The radiolabelled derivatives of CA009 and CA012 show high uptake of the tracer in the tumor tissue. The kinetics of the uptake determined for 203Pb-CA012 reveals a long retention of the radiotracer in the tumor tissue. The selectivity of uptake of 203Pb-CA012 is enhanced when compared to of 203Pb-CA009. This is the result of the rapid clearance of the non-target organs.



FIG. 9: Organ distribution of 203Pb-PSMA-CA012 in tumor bearing mice 0.025 nmol of 203Pb-PSMA-CA012. This quantification confirms the results of the imaging experiment. The high ratio of the tumor to kidney uptake is achieved due to the high excretion valued observed for the kidneys.



FIG. 10: Geometric mean images of 203Pb-CA012 planar scans over time (A) in comparison to a treatment scan with 477Lu-PSMA-617 (B); both acquired with a Medium Energy collimator.



FIG. 11: Safety Dosimetry estimate of diagnostic 203Pb-CA012 (left column) and therapeutic 212Pb-CA012 (right column) based on the male-adult phantom in OLINDA (ULI=upper large intestine, LLI=lower large intestine)



FIG. 12: Dosimetry of 212Pb-CA012 (“TCMC”-PSMA-617) for salivary glands, randomly chosen tumor lesions (sphere model) and the presumably dose-limiting organs in comparison 213Bi-PSMA-617 and 225Ac-PSMA-617.



FIG. 13A: Maximum intensity projection of a 68Ga-PSMA-CA028 PET scan of a patient with multiple lymph node prostate cancer metastases at 1 h and 3 h post injection. Cross-sectional slices demonstrate lymph-node metastases (indicated by red arrows) axillar and hilar (C); also delineable on the correlated CT which serves as a standard of reference.



FIG. 13B. Maximum intensity projections of PSMA-PET performed 1 h (A) and 3 h (B) post injection of 295 MBq/20 nmol 68Ga-CA030. Arrows point to the position of the cross-sectional slices demonstrating bone-metastases in multiple regions of the axial skeleton (C-E). In CT (F), no typical osteoblastic reactions allowed tumor-delineation by morphological information alone.



FIG. 14: Organ distribution expressed as % ID/g of tissue±SD (n=3) of 68Ga-PSMA-CA028 at 1 h, 2 h and 4 h after injection.



FIG. 15: Comparison of the whole-body small-animal PET imaging of selected 68Ga-PSMA ligands 2 h after injection (A) and time course of 68Ga-CA028 (B) and the time course of 68Ga-CA030 (C), in BALB/c nu/nu mice bearing a C4-2 tumor xenograft.



FIG. 16: Serum stability of 177Lu-CA028, 177Lu-CA029, 177Lu-CA030 in comparison with 177Lu-PSMA-617 at 37° C. over 72 h (mean±SD, n=3) as determined by radio-ITLC.



FIG. 17: Serum stability of 64Cu-CA003, 64Cu-CA005 and 64Cu-PSMA-617 at 37° C. over 72 h (mean±SD, n=4) as determined by radio-ITLC.



FIG. 18: Serum stability of 64Cu-CA003, 64Cu-CA005 and 64Cu-PSMA-617 at 37° C. over 72 h (mean±SD, n=4) as determined by activity measurement.



FIG. 19: In vivo metabolite analysis of 64Cu-CA003 in a BALB/c nude mouse (no tumor) at 10 min p.i. Radio-HPLC chromatograms of extracts from the kidney, the blood and the liver show that the activity elutes at the retention time of the intact tracer. This proves the integrity of the copper complex within the main distribution period.



FIG. 20: Radio-HPLC chromatograms of extracts of 64Cu-CA003 in liver in comparison with of 64Cu-chloride in the liver in a BALB/c nude mouse (no tumor) at 10 min p.i.



FIG. 21A: Whole-body small-animal PET scans as maximum-intensity projections of BALB/c nu/nu mice bearing C4-2 tumor xenografts. PET imaging of 64Cu-PSMA-617 (10 MBq, 0.2 nmol), 64Cu-PSMA-CA003 (10 MBq, 0.2 nmol),



FIG. 21B: 64Cu-PSMA-CA003 (5 MBq, 0.030 nmol) co-injected with an excess amount of non-labeled PSMA-617 (2 mg per kilogram of body weight) and 64Cu-chloride (10 MBq). The color bar gives a link between the SUV and the color scale of the PET image with 0=minimum and 4=maximum.



FIG. 22: Comparison of the whole body small animal PET scans as maximum-intensity projections of BALB/c nu/nu mice bearing C4-2 tumor xenografts. PET imaging of the four newly PSMA ligands radiolabeled with 68Ga (20 MBq; 0.2 nmol) 2 h post injection (A), the time course of 68Ga-CA028 (B) and the time course of 68Ga-CA030 (C). The color bar gives a link between the SUV and the color scale of the PET image with 0=minimum and 4E0=maximum.



FIG. 23: Blood time-activity curve for 68Ga PSMA-CA027 (0.6 nmol, 5 MBq) and 68Ga PSMA-CA028 (0.6 nmol, 6 MBq), including bi-exponential curve fit.



FIG. 24. In vivo metabolite analysis of 77Lu-CA028 in comparison with 77Lu-PSMA-617 (10 MBq, 0.2 nmol in approximately 100 μl of 0.9% saline) in a BALB/c nude mouse (tumor) at 1 h p.i. Radio-HPLC chromatograms of extracts from the kidney, the blood, the liver and tumor show that the activity elutes at the retention time of the intact tracer. This proves the integrity of the complex within the main distribution period.



FIG. 25. Organ distribution of 0.05 nmol of 68Ga-CA028 expressed as % ID/g of tissue±SD (n=3) at 20 min, 1 h, 2 h and 4 h after injection.



FIG. 26. Radio-HPLC chromatograms of the novel compounds labeled with 64Cu.



FIG. 27: Time-activity curves of the novel PSMA ligands labeled with 68Ga. (A) Time activity curves for kidney and (B) time activity curves for the tumor up to 1 h post injection. Data are mean standardized uptake values (SUV mean).



FIG. 28. (A) PET image of 9 MBq (0.30 nmol)64Cu-CA003 10 min post injection in a female Swiss mouse. The maximum intensity projection (MIP) illustrates circulation in the blood and renal uptake. (B) PET image of a female Swiss mouse at 10 min p.i. of 10 MBq 64Cu 10 min post injection. The maximum intensity projection (MIP) illustrates a strong uptake in the liver and the kidneys.





The following examples shall merely illustrate the invention. Whatsoever, they shall not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention.


EXAMPLES

Materials and Methods


Solvents and chemicals were purchased from Merck (Darmstadt, Germany) and Sigma-Aldrich (Munich, Germany) and used without further purification. The in vitro experiments were conducted in triplicate and at least three independent sets of data were obtained for each experiment performed. The PET imaging of the prostate cancer patient was consented by the University Hospital Heidelberg following the German laws in vigor and granted the Helsinki Declaration (permit S321/2012).


Synthesis of the Chelator Moieties


The chelator moieties were synthesized in high yields and characterized by LC-MS. The synthesis of the chelator 4-[(1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradec-1-yl)-methyl] benzoic acid, a bifunctional macrocyclic cyclam analogue, was described by Studer and Kaden (Studer M, and Kadan, T. A. One-step synthesis of mono-N-substituted azamacrocycles with a carboxylic group in the side-chain and their complexes with Cu2+ and Ni2+. Helvetica. 1986; 69:2081-2086), while 4-carboxymethyl-11-(1,3-dicarboxypropyl)-1,4,8,11-tetraazabicyclo[6.6.2]hexadecane-pentanedioic acid, a cross-bridged chelator, was reported by Boswell et al. (Boswell C A, Regino C A, Baidoo K E, et al. Synthesis of a cross-bridged cyclam derivative for peptide conjugation and 64Cu radiolabeling. Bioconjug Chem. 2008; 19:1476-1484).


I. General Procedure: Synthesis of Novel PSMA Ligands


The PSMA-binding motif was prepared by solid-phase synthesis on a 2-chlorotrityl resin (2CT-resin), as previously described by Eder et al. (Eder M, Schafer M, Bauder-Wiist U, et al. 68Ga-complex lipophilicity and the targeting property of a urea-based PSMA inhibitor for PET imaging. Bioconjug Chem. 2012; 23:688-697) and Benesovi et al. (Benesova M, Schäfer M, Bauder-Wiist U, et al. Preclinical Evaluation of a Tailor-Made DOTA-Conjugated PSMA Inhibitor with Optimized Linker Moiety for Imaging and Endoradiotherapy of Prostate Cancer. J Nucl Med. 2015; 56:914-920) see FIG. 2. For this purpose Fmoc-Lys(Alloc)-OH was immobilized on an equimolar amount of 2-chlorotrityl resin. Afterwards, the isocyanate (2) of the glutamyl moiety by was generated using triphosgene. The ε-allyloxycarbonyl-protected lysine immobilized on 2-chloro-tritylresin was added and reacted for 16 h with careful agitation resulting in compound 3. The resin was filtered off and the allyloxycarbonyl-protecting group was cleaved to obtain (4). In order to obtain compounds CA001 and CA027, the respective chelator was coupled to this intermediate. Subsequently, the PSMA coupled to the chelator was cleaved from the resin. Alternatively, the coupling of Fmoc-2-naphthylalanine was proceeded to obtain (5). In order to obtain compounds CA002, CA005, CA008 and CA011 the respective chelator was coupled to this intermediate. Subsequently, the PSMA coupled to the chelator was cleaved from the resin. Alternatively, trans-4-(Fmoc-aminomethyl) cyclohexanecarboxylic acid was coupled to obtain (6), the compound to which the respective chelator was coupled to obtain compounds CA003, CA006, CA009, CA012, CA022, CA023, CA024, CA025, CA026, CA028, CA029, and CA030. Subsequently, the PSMA coupled to the chelator was cleaved from the resin. The structures were confirmed by HPLC and MS-LC. The substances were isolated by preparative HPLC using water-acetonitrile gradients containing trifluoroacetic acid. For this, the compounds were purified using a gradient of 20-50% of acetonitrile in water over 15 min.


The purified compounds were analyzed by analytical HPLC (0-100%) acetonitrile in water containing trifluoroacetic acid over 5 min, Monolith RP HPLC column 100×3 mm and LC/MS. The product fractions were pooled and lyophilized.


II. Ligands for Imaging and Therapy with Copper Isotopes


Specification for (CA001)


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 4) with 1.5 equivalents of CTPA-NHS-ester (4-[(1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradec-1-yl)-methyl] benzoic acid) and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 1.68 min; ESI-MS (m/z): [M+H]+ (calculated C30H50N7O8): 636.37 (636.36)




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    • Chemical structure of the chelator CTPA-NHS-ester, the compound used in the synthesis of CA001, CA002 and CA003.





Specification for CA002


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 5) with 1.5 equivalents of CTPA-NHS-ester (4-[(1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradec-1-yl)-methyl] benzoic acid) and 10 equivalents of diisopropylamine (DIPEA) in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 2.39 min; ESI-MS (m/z): [M+H]+ (calculated C43H61N8O9): 833.42 (833.45)


Specification for CA003


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 6) with 1.5 equivalents of CTPA-NHS-ester (4-[(1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradec-1-yl)-methyl] benzoic acid) and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of dimethylformamide (DMF). The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 2.50 min; ESI-MS (m/z): [M+H]+ (calculated C51H74N9O10): 972.52 (972.55)


Specification for CA005


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 5) with 1.5 equivalents of Cross bridged-TE2A chelator, 0.98×nchelator HBTU and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 2.38 min; ESI-MS (m/z): [M+H]+ (calculated C44H64N8O13): 913.45 (913.47)




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    • Chemical structure of the chelator chelator 8-carboxymethyl-cross bridged-TE2A, the compound used in the synthesis of CA005, and CA006.





Specification for CA006


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 6) with 1.5 equivalents of Cross bridged-TE2A chelator, 0.98×nchelator HBTU and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 2.55 min; ESI-MS (m/z): [M+H]+ (calculated C52H78N9O14): 1052.62 (1052.56)


Specification for CA022


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 6) with 1.5 equivalents of cross bridged-CTPA chelator and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 2.72 min; ESI-MS (m/z): [M+H]+ (calculated C53H76N9O10): 998.56 (998.57)




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    • Chemical structure of the chelator Cross-bridged-CTPA, the compound used in the synthesis of CA022





Specification CA023


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 6) with 1.5 equivalents of 8-carboxymethyl-CTPA chelator and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 2.54 min; ESI-MS (m/z): [M+H]+ (calculated C53H76N9O12): 1030.55 (1030.56)




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  • Chemical structure of the chelator 8-carboxymethyl-CTPA, the compound used in the synthesis of CA023.



Specification for CA024


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 6) with 1.5 equivalents of 8-carboxymethyl-cross bridged-CTPA chelator and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 2.60 min; ESI-MS (m/z): [M+H]+ (calculated C55H78N9O12): 1056.56 (1056.57)




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Chemical structure of the chelator 8-carboxymethyl-cross bridged-CTPA, the compound used in the synthesis of CA024.


Specification for CA025


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 6) with 1.5 equivalents of 8,11-bis(carboxymethyl)-CTPA chelator [CPTA=4-[(1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradec-1-yl)methyl]benzoic acid] and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 2.60 min; ESI-MS (m/z): [M+H]+ (calculated C55H78N9O14): 1088.55 (1088.56)




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Chemical structure of the chelator 8,11-bis(carboxymethyl)-CTPA, the compound used in the synthesis of CA025.


Specification for CA026


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 6) with 1.5 equivalents of 8,11-bis(carboxymethyl)-CTPA chelator and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 2.53 min; ESI-MS (m/z): [M+H]+ (calculated C57H80N9O16): 1146.56 (1146.57)




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Chemical structure of the chelator 4, 8,11-tris(carboxymethyl)-CTPA, the compound used in the synthesis of CA026.


III. PSMA Ligands for Alpha Therapy with Lead-Isotopes (203Pb/212Pb)


Specification for CA007


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 5) with 1.5 equivalents of p-SCN-Bn-TCMC chelator [TCMC=1,4,7,10-tetraaza-1,4,7,10-tetra(2-carbamoylmethyl)cyclododecane]and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 2.41 min; ESI-MS (m/z): [M+H]+ (calculated C49H70N13O12S): 1064.49 (1064.50)




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    • Chemical structure of the chelator p-SCN-Bn-TCMC, the compound used in the synthesis of CA007, and CA008, CA009.





Specification for CA009


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 6) with 1.5 equivalents of p-SCN-Bn-TCMC chelator and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). ESI-MS (m/z): [M+H]+ (calculated C57H83N14O13S): 1203.59 (1203.60)


Specification for CA011


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 5) with 1.5 equivalents of 2-(4,7,10-tris(2-amino-2-oxoethyl)-1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecan-1-yl)acetic acid, the monocarboxylate derivative of the chelator 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetamide (DO3AM), 0.98×nchelator HBTU and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 2.07 min; ESI-MS (m/z): [M+H]+ (calculated C41H62N11O12): 900.45 (900.46)




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    • Chemical structure of the chelator 2-(4,7,10-tris(2-amino-2-oxoethyl)-1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecan-1-yl)acetic acid, the monocarboxylate derivative of the chelator 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetamide (DO3AM), the compound used in the synthesis of CA010, CA011 and CA012.





Specification for CA012


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 6) with 1.5 equivalents of DO3AM chelator, 0.98×nchelator HBTU and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 2.21 min; [M+H]+ (calculated C49H75N12O13): 1039.54 (1039.56)


IV. Chelator Spacer Moieties Enhancing the Pharmacokinetic Properties of PSMA-617


Specification for CA027


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 4) with 1.5 equivalents of p-NHS-Bn-DOTA chelator and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 1.47 min; [M+H]+ (calculated C34H52N7O14): 782.33 (782.36)




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    • Chemical structure of p-NHS ester-Bn-DOTA, the chelator used for the synthesis of CA027 and CA028





Specification for CA028


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 6) with 1.5 equivalents of p-NHS-Bn-DOTA chelator and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 2.36 min; [M+H]+ (calculated C55H76N9O16): 1119.53 (1118.54)


Specification for CA029


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 6) with 1.5 equivalents of p-SCN-Bn-DOTA chelator and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 2.49 min; [M+H]+ (calculated C57H79N10O17S): 1207.52 (1207.53)




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    • Chemical structure of the chelator p-SCN-Bn-DOTA, the compound used in the synthesis of CA029.





Specification for CA030


The product was obtained by incubating the resin (compound 6) with 1.5 equivalents of p-NCS-benzyl-DOTA-GA chelator and 10 equivalents of DIPEA in 500 μl of DMF. The compound was purified and the final product was analyzed by HPLC as described above (see section I.). HPLC-retention time: 2.50 min; [M+H]+ (calculated C60H84N11O18S): 1278.56 (1278.57)




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  • Chemical structure of the chelator p-NCS-benzyl-DOTA-GA, the compound used in the synthesis of CA030.



V Synthesis of Radiolabeled Complexes:


V.1 Radiochemical Synthesis of the 64Cu-PSMA-Derivatives


The conjugates (1 mM in water, 5 μl, 5 nmol) were added to a mixture of 400 μl sodium acetate buffer (0.4 M in water, pH 5.0), 10 μl ascorbic acid (20% in water) and 282 μl [64Cu]CuCl2 in 0.1 M HCl (200 MBq). The mixture was heated at 95° C. for 5 min. The labeling was controlled by radio-HPLC (0-100% MeCN in 5 min, Monolith column), with a flow rate of 2 mL/min and retention time of 2.3 min.


The labeling led to radiolabeling yields >98% within 10 min (as illustrated by the radiochromatograms in FIG. 26). The specific activity of e.g. 64Cu-PSMA-CA003 was approximately 40 MBq/nmol. The same protocol was used for the labeling with 67Cu.


V.2 Radiochemical Synthesis of the 203/212Pb-PSMA-Ligands


Eighty nmol of the conjugates (1 mM in water, 80 μl, 80 nmol) were added to 400 μl sodium acetate buffer (0.4 M in water, pH 5.0), 10 μl ascorbic acid (20% in water) and 140 μl 203Pb-chloride solution in 0.04 M HCl, with specific activity approx. 102.6 TBq/g (Lantheus Medical Imaging, USA). The mixture was then heated at 95° C. for 5 min. The labeling was controlled by radio-HPLC.


V.3 Radiochemical Synthesis of the 68Ga-PSMA-CA028 (CA027, CA029, CA030)



68Ga was eluted from a 68Ge/Ga generator (iThemba LABS, South Africa). The conjugate (1 mM in DMSO, 20 μl, 20 nmol) was added to a mixture of 320 μl sodium acetate buffer (0.4 M in water, pH 4-5), 10 μl ascorbic acid (20% in water) and 400 MBq 68Ga in 0.6 M HCl. The mixture was heated at 95° C. for 5 min. The labeling was controlled by radio-HPLC (0-100% MeCN in 5 min, Monolith column), with a flow rate of 2 mL/min and retention time of 2.4 min.












Analytic Data of selected Novel Ligands











Molecular weight
[68Ga-Ligand]-HPLC
m/z*


Compound
(g/mol)
retention time (min)
experimental













CA027
781.35
1.55
782.33


CA028
1117.53
2.37
1118.53


CA029
1206.52
2.60
1207.52


CA030
1277.56
2.61
1278.56





*Mass spectrometry of non-labeled ligands detected as [M + H]+






V.4 Radiochemical Synthesis of the 177Lu-PSMA-CA028 (CA027, CA029, CA030)


For 177Lu labeling, approx. 20 MBq was mixed with 200 μl of 0.4 M sodium acetate buffer containing Chelex (pH=5). 2 μl of a 1 mM solution of the compound in 10% DMSO in water, 2 μl of a saturated solution of ascorbic acid and 40 W of the solution [177Lu]LuCl3 were mixed and heated to 95° C. for 10 min. The labelling was checked by radio-HPLC (0-100% ACN in water within 5 min, Monolith column).


VI. Preclinical Evaluation


In vitro and in vivo experiments were performed using the PSMA-positive C4-2 cell line, a subline of the LNCaP (lymph node carcinoma of the prostate) cell line (CRL-3314; American Type Culture Collection). C4-2 cells were cultivated in RPMI 1640 (PAN Biotech) medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum and stable glutamine (PAN Biotech). Cells were grown at 37° C. and incubated with humidified air equilibrated with 5% CO2.


VI.1 In Vitro


VI.1.1 Competitive binding assay and internalization ratio


A MultiScreenHTS-DV filter plate was incubated at room temperature with 100 μl PBS containing 1% BSA per well for 30 min. After removal of the PBS/BSA solution 1×10′ C4-2 cells were added Opti-MEM to each well. The inhibitory potency of the synthesized compounds was determined using 0.75 nM of 68Ga-labeled PSMA-HBED-CC dimer (68Ga-PSMA-10) (Schafer M, Bauder-Wüst U, Leotta K, et al. A dimerized urea-based inhibitor of the prostate-specific membrane antigen for 68Ga-PET imaging of prostate cancer. EJNMMI research. 2012; 2:23-23.) as a standard. All non-labeled compounds were dissolved in Opti-MEM at a volume of 300 μl with the following concentrations: 0, 0.5, 1, 2.5, 5, 10, 25, 50, 100, 500, 1000 and 5000 nM. Subsequently, 3 μl of the radiolabeled compound was added. 50 μl of this mixture was taken to obtain a 0.75 nM concentration of the radiolabeled ligand. After 45 min incubation at 37° C., the cells were washed twice with PBS on a multiscreen vacuum manifold (Millipore, Billerica, Mass.) and the cell-bound radioactivity was measured with a gamma counter (Packard Cobra II, GMI, Minnesota, USA).. The inhibitory potency was determined using 68Ga-labeled PSMA-HBED-CC dimer (i.e. PSMA-11) as reference. The Ki was calculated using a nonlinear regression algorithm (Graph Pad Prism 5.01 software). The experiments were performed in quadruplicate.


For determination of the specific internalization ratio, 24-well plates were incubated for 20 min with 0.1% poly-L-lysine in PBS at room temperature and washed once with PBS. In the next step, 1 ml RPMI medium containing 1×105 C4-2 cells was added to each well and incubated overnight. The conditions during the experiment for each compound were: incubation at 37° C. or 4° C. with or without receptor blocking via 2-(phosphonomethyl)pentanedioic acid (2-PMPA; Axxora) at a final concentration of 500 μM. Afterwards, the cells were incubated with 250 μl of a 30 nM solution of the labeled compounds. The plates were either incubated for 45 min in a water bath at 37° C. or on ice at 4° C. Subsequently, the cells were washed 3 times with 1 mL of ice-cold PBS and incubated with 0.5 ml glycine (50 mM in HCl pH 2.8) for 5 min. After an additional washing step with 1 mL of ice-cold PBS, the cells were lysed with 0.5 ml of 0.3 M NaOH, collected and the radioactivity was measured with a gamma-counter for 1 min. The specific cellular uptake was determined as percentage of initially added radioactivity bound to 106 cells (% IA/106 cells) by subtraction of the respective uptake under blocking conditions. All experiments were performed in triplicate.


The results are given in FIG. 3. The Ki determination showed nanomolar binding affinities of the synthesized ligands to PSMA.


For the 203Pb labeled compounds, compounds CA009 and CA012 revealed the highest affinity to inhibit PSMA. Moreover, the 203Pb-labeled compounds CA009 and CA012 showed high rates of specific internalization in the PSMA positive cell line. The compounds 203Pb-CA009 and 203Pb-CA012 showed an internalization ratio up to 28.36±2.23 and for 7.33±1.26 injected activity/106 C4-2 cells (n=3).


As shown in the table in FIG. 3, for the Cu-labeled ligands, e.g., CA003 revealed a particularly high affinity to PSMA, followed by CA006, CA002 and CA026. Moreover, the 64Cu-labeled compounds showed specific binding to C4-2 cells. 34.63±2.77% of 64Cu-CA003, 18.63±4.46% of 64Cu-CA005 and 38.7±6.69% of 64Cu-CA022 were internalized (n=3). 106 C4-2 cells were used for these experiments.


Further, the results of the Ki determination for e.g. the Ga-labeled ligands revealed e.g., nanomolar binding affinities of the synthesized ligands to PSMA. As shown in FIG. 3, among all new compounds CA030 showed particularly advantageous properties.


VI.1.2 Serum Stability


VI.1.2.1 Serum Stability of 203Pb Labeled Compounds


The stability of the radiolabeled compounds was determined by incubation in 300 μl of human serum at 37° C. after 1 h, 2 h, 3 h, 6 h, 24 h, 48 h and 72 hours. The serum was precipitated by addition of 2 parts acetonitrile. Subsequently, the samples were vortexed and centrifuged for 5 min at 13,000 rpm (2 times) and the supernatant was analyzed by radio-HPLC (0-100% MeCN in 5 min, Monolith column).


All compounds showed a high stability in human serum for at least 48 h. CA011 and CA012 showed a particularly advantageous stability and were stable for at least 72 h.


VI.1.2.2 Serum Stability of 68Ga, 77Lu and 64Cu Labeled Compounds


After radiolabeling of the compounds the serum stability was determined by iTLC and HPLC analysis. 50 μL (20 MBq) of the labeled ligands was added to 200 μL of human serum (H4522; Sigma-Aldrich, Germany) and incubated at 37° C. for different time-points (0, 2 h, 24 h, 48 h and 72 h). 0.5×5 cm strips of iTLC-SG-glass microfiber chromatography paper (Folsom, Calif. USA) were used. 0.5 μL of the radiolabeled compound in serum was applied to each strip at 1 cm from the bottom (origin) and the solvent (sodium citrate buffer (0.5 M, pH=5.0) in case of 177 Lu ligands, (1% Na-EDTA, pH=4) in case of Cu labeled ligands) front was allowed to rise to 5 cm from the bottom. Finally, each strip was cut in 8 pieces; each piece was measured in a gamma-counter. For HPLC analysis an equal volume of ACN was added to the samples to precipitate the serum proteins. Subsequently, the samples were centrifuged for 10 min at 13,000 rpm and the pellet and supernatant were separated and the relative activity was measured. The results are expressed as percent. In addition, an aliquot of the supernatant was analyzed by radio-HPLC (0-100% ACN in 5 min, Monolith column), with a flow rate of 2 mL/min.


The results of the stability testings of the compounds radiolabeled with 68Ga and 77Lu is shown in FIG. 16) As indicated by HPLC and radio TLC, the 68Ga-labeled compounds did not show degradation after incubation for 2 h in human serum. 177Lu-CA028 showed 40% of free 77Lu after incubation for 24 h whereas CA029, CA030 and the reference compound PSMA-617 revealed no free activity at this time point (FIG. 16).


The results of the stability testings of 64Cu-labeled compounds is shown in FIG. 17 and FIG. 18. Until 2 h incubation, ITLC showed that all compounds dissociate only to a degree of less than 2±0.6%. After 24 h incubation only 6±4% of 64Cu-CA003 and 3±1% of 64Cu-CA006 were found to be dissociated. In contrast 64Cu-PSMA-617 showed 13±3% of free 64Cu activity. Long term stability examination (72 h) showed that 64Cu-CA006 (8±4%) possesses stability comparable to 64Cu-CA003 (11±3%). At this point in time 18±6% of 64Cu-PSMA-617 was found to be dissociated. After incubation for 2 h, activity measurement in the pellet (FIG. 18) revealed that 19.0±5.2% of 64Cu-CA003, 12±7.2% of 64Cu-CA006 and 40±7.5% of 64Cu-PSMA-617 was precipitated with the protein fraction. The percentage of the activity in the pellet increased over time. The highest amount of activity was measured in the pellet of 64Cu-PSMA-617 followed by 64Cu-CA003, and less activity was found to be precipitated for 64Cu-CA006


VI.2 In Vivo Experiments


The in vivo experiments were carried out in accordance with the laws of the German Federal Republic. For PET imaging and biodistribution studies, male nude mice (Balb/c nu/nu mice) (19-23 g) were obtained from Charles River at 4-5 weeks of age and kept under specific-pathogen-free condition for 1 week prior to the study. The mice were housed with a 12-hour/12-hour light/dark cycle and had free access to water and food. The mice were anesthetized with 2% sevoflurane and inoculated subcutaneously on the right trunk with 5×107 C4-2 cells in 50% Matrigel in Opti-MEM I (1×) medium. Organ distribution studies were performed, when the size of the tumor was approximately 1 cm3.


VI.2.1 Lead-Labeled Compounds:


VI.2.1 a Scintigraphic Imaging and Biodistribution


For small-animal imaging the mice were anesthetized with 2% sevoflurane. 0.1 nmol (1.0 MBq) of the 203Pb-ligand was injected into the tail vein. Serial planar scans were performed using a Gamma Imager SCT (Biospace Lab, Paris, France) with a parallel collimator (35 mm/1.8 mm/0.2 mm) after 10 min, 1 h, 4 h, 24 h. and 72 h. Based on the imaging results, compound CA012 was chosen for biodistribution studies. Experiments were performed in triplicate.


The results are given in FIGS. 8 and 9.


VI.2.2 64Cu-Labeled Compounds:


VI.2.2 a) Stability in the Blood and In Vivo Fate of 64Cu-Chloride and 64Cu-CA003


The stability of 64Cu-labeled CA003 in vivo was determined by ITLC and HPLC. Male BALB/c nude mice without tumor (n=3) were injected via the tail vein with 64Cu-CA003 (3.6 MBq; 0.26 nmol, dissolved in a total volume of approximately 100 μl of 0.9% saline) and 800 μl blood was harvested 10 min post injection. The blood sample was centrifuged for 10 min at 13,000 rpm. Subsequently, the pellet and supernatant were separated and the relative activity was determined. ITLC was performed in order to assess the stability of the radiolabeled compound in the blood as described above. Furthermore, an aliquot of the supernatant was analyzed by radio-HPLC (0-100% ACN in 5 min, Monolith column), with a flow rate of 2 mL/min after addition an equal volume of ACN and removal of the proteins by centrifugation The metabolization in vivo was studied by radio-HPLC analysis. Female Swiss mice (n=3) without tumor were injected via the tail vein with 64Cu-chloride (10 MBq in approximately 100 μL of 0.9% saline) or 64Cu-CA003 (9 MBq, 0.30 nmol in approximately 100 μL of 0.9% saline). PET imaging was performed 10 min post injection and subsequently blood, the liver and the kidneys were harvested. The tissues were rinsed with precooled saline, blotted dry and treated with 2 mL of 0.1 M NH4OAc/EtOH (35:65). The tissues were homogenized using an Ultra-Turrax T8 (IKA Labortechnik, Germany). The samples were centrifuged for 10 min at 13,000 rpm (4° C.).


Subsequently, the pellet and supernatant were separated and the relative activity was measured. The results are expressed as percent. Additionally, an aliquot of supernatant was prepared for HPLC measurement by precipitation of the proteins with ACN as described above. The sample was analyzed by radio-HPLC (0-100% ACN in 5 min, Monolith column), with a flow rate of 2 mL/min. Fractions were collected every ten seconds over the whole course of the chromatography and the relative activity of the samples was measured in a gamma-counter to reconstruct a chromatogram. ITLC results of the blood stability showed that 64Cu-CA003 undergo 3% of 64Cu dissociation or 97±2.3% of the intact tracer (see FIG. 19). Radio HPLC chromatograms likewise confirms the integrity of the copper complex (see FIG. 20). In vivo fate of 64Cu-chloride or 64Cu-CA003 studies was conducted and PET imaging of 64Cu-chloride and 64Cu-CA003 showed different pharmacokinetics (Figure S21). Maximum intensity projection PET imaging of 64Cu-chloride indicated, lower blood circulation (1.3), high liver (2.7) and kidney uptake (3.4). Whereas 64Cu-CA003 demonstrated longer blood circulation (2.3), higher kidney (5.7) uptake and lower liver accumulation (1.0) than 64Cu-chloride (FIG. 28). The integrity of the 64Cu-CA003 was proven by radio HPLC chromatograms of tissue extracts of kidney, blood and liver (FIG. 19). The chromatogram for 64Cu-CA003 showed different retention time of the tracer than free copper, 64Cu-chloride (FIG. 20).


VI.2.2 b) Organ Distribution Experiments (64Cu Ligands) and Small Animal PET


Based on the results of the PET imaging, CA003, and CA023, were chosen for a biodistribution analysis using the C4-2 tumor bearing mice. Experiments were performed in triplicate. 0.025 nmol of the 64Cu-labeled compound (1 MBq per mouse in approximately 100 μL of 0.9% saline) was administered by tail vein injection. At the time points: 10 min, 1 h, 4 h, 24 h and 72 h the organs were dissected and weighed and the activity was measured using a 7-counter (Packard Cobra Auto-gamma). The percentage of the injected dose per gram (% ID/g) was calculated. (See FIG. 6A, 6B)


In addition to this, the experiment with simultaneous administration of PSMA-617 to block PSMA binding at 1 h (n=3) is represented (FIGS. 6C and 6D).


For small-animal PET imaging with various 64Cu-labeled PSMA ligands, 0.2 nmol, 10 MBq of approximately 100 μL in 0.9% saline the radiolabeled compound were injected into a C4-2 tumor bearing mouse. The dynamic PET was recorded in a small animal PET scanner (Siemens Inveon D-PET, Malvern, Pa. USA). The SUV values were obtained from conventional (non-dynamic) PET images. The formula for the SUV was:






SUV
=


activity





in





ROI






(

Bq
ml

)

×
animal





weight






(
g
)



injected





dose






(
Bq
)







The volumes-of-interest (VOIs) were obtained by manual delineation of the appropriate whole tissue (heart, kidneys, bladder, tumor—with an approximate volume of 100-500 l)—or parts of the tissue liver and muscle. The images were reconstructed based on the procedure: OSEM 3D/SP MAP with 16 subsets, 2 iterations and an image x-y size: 256, image z size: 161. The data were not modified with a post processing filter. The software used to analyze images and TACs was Inveon™ Acquisition Workplace (IAW) from Siemens IRW 4.1. Dynamic PET scans were performed 0-60 min post injection, and images were reconstructed in three time frames of 20 min (0-20 min, 20-40 min and 40-60 min) for visual display. For some compounds that showed long retention later time points (2 h, 4 h, 20 h, 45/48 h) were included as shown in FIG. 2/FIG. 3 and Table S1+S2. After 1 h a static PET scan was generated. In order to compare the different radiotracers, the mean SUVs were plotted over time.


The results obtained for the biodistribution of the PSMA ligand 64Cu-CA003 (n=3) are shown in FIGS. 6A-6D. 10 min after injection 11.33±4.11% ID/g tumor uptake is observed. After 4 h the amount of the tracer accumulation (32.34±10.6% ID/g) in the tumor is much higher than in the kidneys (13.33±3.36% ID/g). Time activity curves generated from the dynamic PET imaging, showed a tumor-to-muscle ratio of 10.5 and 3.0 for tumor-to-blood at 1 h post injection, see following table VI.2.2 b_1:









TABLE VI.2.2 b_1.







Mean standardized uptake values (mSUV) derived from the


time-activity curves from small-animal PET of 64Cu-CA003


in a BALB/c nu/nu mouse bearing a C4-2 tumor xenograft













meanSUV
Heart
Liver
Kidneys
Bladder
Muscle
Tumor
















T1 = 1 h
0.25
0.19
4.0
5.3
0.07
0.76


T2 = 2 h
0.04
0.19
1.3
23
0.01
1.2


T3 = 4 h
0.04
0.12
0.70
2.8
0.01
1.0


T4 = 20 h
0.02
0.08
0.15
0.44
0.01
0.92


T5 = 45 h
0.01
0.06
0.08
0.11
0.00
0.66









These curves demonstrated a rapid renal uptake. The organ distribution study showed that the high kidney uptake at 1 h (67.04±20.89% ID/g) was largely cleared (7.48±8.51% ID/g) within 24 h. In contrast the high tumor uptake value (30.83±12.61% ID/g at 1 h p.i.) remained almost constant (19.99±6.43% ID/g at 24 h p.i.). PET imaging confirmed the strong accumulation of the radiotracer in the tumor (FIG. 4). At 1 h post injection, the amount of the radioactivity in the background organs such as kidneys decreased whereas the tumor-to-background ratio increased. 24 h after injection the PET scans demonstrated a very high tumor uptake confirming the enrichment in the tumor.


The specificity of the binding to PSMA was proven with a blockade experiment: co-injection of non labelled PSMA-617 [2 mg/kg] led to a strong decrease of the accumulation of 64Cu-CA003 in C4-2 tumors (30.83±12.61% ID/g to 2.35±0.38% ID/g) and in the kidneys (67.04±20.89% ID/g to 3.47±0.48% ID/g) at 1 h post injection. PET imaging of 64Cu-CA003 with excess of non-labeled PSMA (FIG. 6C/6D) clearly confirmed the biodistribution results.


Time activity curves generated from the dynamic PET imaging, showed a tumor-to-muscle ratio of 10.5 and 3.0 for tumor-to-blood at 1 h post injection (Table S1). These curves demonstrated a rapid renal uptake. The organ distribution study (FIG. 6A) showed that the high kidney uptake at 1 h (67.04±20.89% ID/g) was largely cleared (7.48±8.51% ID/g) within 24 h. In contrast the high tumor uptake value (30.83±12.61% ID/g at 1 h p.i.) remained almost constant (19.99±6.43% ID/g at 24 h p.i.). PET imaging confirmed the strong accumulation of the radiotracer in the tumor (FIG. 4). At 1 h post injection, the amount of the radioactivity in the background organ such as kidneys decreased whereas the tumor-to-background ratio increased. 24 h after injection the PET scans demonstrated a very high tumor uptake confirming the enrichment in the tumor. The high tumor accumulation was retained at long time points i.e. at 45 h post injection (FIG. 4).


IV.2.2 c) Comparison of 64Cu-PSMA-CA003 with 4Cu-PSMA-617 and 4 Cu-Chloride In Vivo


In order to prove the in vivo stability of the copper complexes of PSMA-CA003, 64Cu-PSMA-CA003 was compared to 64Cu-PSMA-617 as well as to 64Cu-chloride (FIG. 20). The compounds were studied in a small animal PET study in a C4-2 tumor xenograft. The results are shown in FIG. 3. The time activity curves obtained from dynamic PET for 64Cu-CA003 showed a high tumor-to-liver ratio (4.0) at 1 h after injection, whereas for 64Cu-PSMA-617 the tumor-to-liver ratio was 0.37 (FIG. 20/21 and Table S1/S2).









TABLE S2







Mean standardized uptake values (mSUV) derived from the


time-activity curves from small-animal PET of mCu-PSMA-6I7


in a BALB/c nu/nu mouse bearing a C4-2 tumor xenograft













meanSUV
Heart
Liver
Kidneys
Bladder
Muscle
Tumor
















T1 = 1 h
0.30
1.8
1.7
9.6
0.20
0.67


T2 = 2 h
0.25
1.6
0.84
3.0
0.10
0.5


T3 = 4 h
0.21
2.0
0.64
0.19
0.09
0.86


T4 = 20 h
0.25
1.5
0.44
0.12
0.07
0.64


T5 = 45 h
0.21
1.2
0.34
0.10
0.06
0.46









To prove that the species which is taken up into the tumor is actually 64Cu-CA003 and not free 64Cu, PET imaging of 64Cu-chloride performed in C4-2 tumor bearing mice (FIG. 20/21) was followed by homogenization, extraction and subsequent HPLC analysis of the respective tissue. The pharmacokinetic observed for 64Cu-chloride is different to that of 64Cu-CA003. PET imaging of 64Cu-chloride at maximum-intensity projections reveal an increasing tumor uptake up to 2 h after injection.


In contrast to 64Cu-CA003, 64Cu-chloride showed a very high liver accumulation (FIG. 20/21). The tumor-to-liver ratio at 2 h for 64Cu-chloride was 0.38, whereas the tumor-to-liver ratio of 64Cu-CA003 was 6.3. 1 h post injection the time activity curves and the mean SUV body weight values generated from the dynamic PET imaging of 68Ga-CA028 demonstrated a tumor-to-kidney ratio of 0.78. At 2 h, this ratio was increased to 3.0 (FIG. 15, and Table S1.1), while the ligands 68Ga-CA030 and 68Ga-CA029 showed lower tumor-to-kidneys ratio of 0.52 and 0.33, respectively (FIGS. 3, 25 and 23).









TABLE S1.1







Mean standardized uptake values (mSUV) derived from the time-


activity curves from small-animal PET of 68Ga-PSMA-CA028


in a BALB/c nu/nu mouse bearing a C4-2 tumor xenograft.













mSUV
Heart
Liver
Kidneys
Bladder
Tumor
Muscle
















T1 = 1 h
0.36
0.22
0.39
6.50
0.81
0.13


T2 = 2 h
0.13
0.09
0.29
2.5
0.78
0.05









The time-activity curves revealed a fast clearance of the tracer—68Ga-CA028 showed a high tumor accumulation and high kidney values. In contrast, for 68Ga-CA027 a faster clearance by the kidney at a tumor accumulation was found (FIG. 22). Even though 68Ga-CA030 demonstrated higher kidney uptake values than 68Ga-CA028, it showed the highest tumor uptake among all compounds (FIG. 15C). The small animal PET images demonstrated a very fast kidney clearance and low tumor accumulation of 68Ga-CA027. Distinctly, the radiotracers 68Ga-CA028, 68Ga-CA029 and 68Ga-CA030 showed high tumor accumulation (FIG. 27B). 68Ga-CA029 showed the highest kidney uptake, followed by 68Ga-CA030 (FIG. 27A).


VII. In-Human Studies in a First Patient


VII.1 PET with 64Cu-PSMA-CA003


The PET imaging of the prostate cancer patient shown in FIG. 7 was consented by the University Hospital Heidelberg following the German laws in vigor and granted the Helsinki Declaration (permit S321/2012).


The first-in-human study was performed with 200 MBq of 64Cu-PSMA-CA003. The first PET imaging is presented in FIG. 7 and shows imaging of a patient with high level of the prostate-specific membrane antigen. It is clearly evident, that the patient suffered from PCa in metastasized stage notably through multiple lymph node metastases, on the right shoulder the main tumor is localized.


With the new copper ligands a significant improvement of the pharmacokinetics and the tumor targeting for copper isotopes was observed. Despite the high labeling yields of PSMA-617 with 64Cu in vitro (>99%), a poor in vivo stability with occurrence high liver uptake was observed (Cui C, Hanyu M, Hatori A, et al. Synthesis and evaluation of [(64)Cu]PSMA-617 targeted for prostate-specific membrane antigen in prostate cancer. Am J Nucl Med Mol Imaging. 2017; 7:40-52).


The novel 64Cu-labeled PSMA ligands are promising agents to target PSMA and visualize PSMA positive tumor lesions as shown in the preclinical evaluation by small-animal PET studies, organ distribution and the first-in-human application.


The imaging in a patient with the 64Cu-PSMA-CA003 ligand demonstrated its successful translation in clinical studies.


VII.2 Experiments with 203Pb-CA012


Two patients, with castration-resistant metastasized prostate cancer underwent planar whole-body scans (GE Hawkeye Millennium, 1″ crystal, ME-collimator, 279 keV peak+/−10%, 8 cm/min) at 0.4 h, 4 h, 18 h, 28 h and 42 h post-injection of 258 and 310 MBq 203Pb-CA012, respectively. Images were loaded into the QDOSE dosimetry software suite (ABX-CRO, Dresden) and coregistered. Kidneys, liver, spleen, urinary bladder, salivary glands (both left and right of parotid and submandibular glands) and several tumor lesions as well as a total-body region-of-interest (ROI) were segmented using organ-dependent percentage of maximum thresholds (15-65%) in the most suitable time-point and propagated to all other time-points performing an additional organ-based automatic rigid co-registration step. These ROIs were used to determine time-activity-curves (TAC) for each organ, tumors and total body. The first time-point (before voiding) of the uncorrected geometric mean images was used to calibrate the ROI-counts to injected activity (MBq). Red marrow TAC was calculated from venous blood (6 samples/patient) using established model assumptions [Shen, S., Meredith, R. F., Duan, J., Macey, D. J., Khazaeli, M. B., Robert, F., LoBuglio, A. F.: Improved Prediction of Myelotoxicity Using a Patient-Specific Imaging Dose Estimate for Non-Marrow-Targeting 90Y-Antibody Therapy. J Nucl Med, 43: 1245-1253, 2002. Sgouros, G. Bone Marrow Dosimetry for Radioimmunotherapy: Theoretical Considerations. J Nucl Med, 34: 689-694, 1993.].


All TACs derived from the 203Pb data were re-calculated using the replacement nuclide function of QDOSE, which automatically corrects all time-points for the physical decay of the source isotope, leaving only its biological clearance; then the physical decay of the replacement radionuclide is applied.


Bi-exponential curve fitting was applied to all organ TACs (with exception of few tumors and glands, which had to be fitted mono-exponentially). The cumulated activity was integrated assuming a linear increase from 0 to first measured time-point, numerically from first to last measured time-point using trapezoidal approximations and from last measured time-point to infinity using the fit-function. The remainder body was calculated by subtracting all source organs from the total body. The residence times of kidneys, liver, spleen, urinary bladder content, red marrow and remainder body were exported for dose calculation in OLINDA 1.1 [Stabin, M. G., Sparks, R. B., Crowe, E. OLINDA/EXM: the second-generation personal computer software for internal dose assessment in nuclear medicine. J Nucl Med, 46(6):1023-1027, 2005] using the organ masses of the male-adult-phantom.


The potential therapeutic nuclide 212Pb decays further to 212Bi, 212Po and 208Tl. Assuming that the daughter nuclides remain at the site of decay of the parent nuclide and transient equilibrium between 212Pb and its daughters, the same residence time as for 212Pb was applied to the daughter nuclides. OLINDA calculations were performed for all nuclides individually. Respective decay steps were summed up, using weighting factors of 64.07% for 212Po and 350.93% for 208Tl according to their branching ratios. According to the suggestions from the Committee on Medical Internal Radiation Dose and the US Department of Energy [Sgouros G, Roeske J C, McDevitt M R, et al. MIRD pamphlet no. 22 (abridged): radiobiology and dosimetry of alpha-particle emitters for targeted radionuclide therapy. J Nucl Med. 2010; 51:311-28. Feinendegen L E, McClure J J. Meeting report: alpha-emitters for medical therapy-workshop of the United States Department of Energy, Denver, Colo., may 30-31, 1996. Radiat Res. 1997; 148:195-201.], physical absorbed doses were translated into equivalent doses using weighting factors of 5 for alpha and 1 for beta and photon radiation; Thus, reflecting the relative biological efficacy in regard to deterministic radiation effects—considered the leading factor in therapeutic settings. Tumor and salivary gland volumes were measured individually based on CT-segmentation and their absorbed doses were approximated by using a power function interpolating the spherical model estimates [Stabin, M. G., Konijnenberg, M. Re-evaluation of Absorbed Fractions for Photons and Electrons in Small Spheres. J Nucl Med, 41: 149-160, 2000.].



203Pb Imaging Data of Patients


With an injected activity of 258-310 MBq, the 279 keV gamma rays emitted from 203Pb with an 80% abundance probability were found to be sufficient to obtain clear planar scans (FIG. 10). These scans show the tracer labeled with the lead isotope specifically enriches in the target tissue. Consequently the method provides a successful approach to use isotopes of lead for the intended applications. (The Organ distribution of 203Pb-PSMA-CA012 in tumor bearing mice is shown in the Table in FIG. 11)


VII.3 Dosimetry Estimates 203Pb-CA012


Dosimetry Estimates


The dosimetry estimate for diagnostic 203Pb-CA012 is presented in the left column of the table in FIG. 11. All organ absorbed doses are dominated by photons (primary emission at 279 keV), low probability emissions in sum contribute <10% in all organs, respectively. A typical clinical examination with 250-300 MBq, e.g. for individual dosimetry prediction, translates into a radiation burden of 6.0-7.5 mSv.


During decay from 212Pb to stable 208Pb, regardless whether by the Polonium or Thallium branch, two beta- and one alpha-particle are emitted per atom. The safety dosimetry estimate for therapeutic 212Pb-CA012, taking into account the complete succeeding decay chain, is presented on the right column of FIG. 11. Assuming an RBE=5 for alpha and RBE=1 for beta and gamma radiation the equivalent doses for therapeutic 212Pb-CA012 consist of 96.4% alpha, 2.2% beta and 1.4% gamma contribution. Remarkably: the initial beta decay of 212Pb, which is directly traced by 203Pb, contributes less than 1% to the total equivalent dose; 99% of the equivalent dose arises from the succeeding daughter nuclides.


Amongst the OLINDA organs, kidneys and red-marrow might be dose limiting, together with the salivary glands which were assessed using the spherical model. The therapeutic range of a radiopharmaceutical is defined by the ratio between tumor dose and dose-limiting organs. The most relevant dosimetry information are summarized and compared to other PSMA-targeting alpha therapies in FIG. 12.


VII.4 Human PET-Scan-68Ga-CA028 and 68Ga-CA030


Method for CA028 radiation dosimetry was performed as previously described in Afshar-Oromieh et al., 2015 (Afshar-Oromieh A, Hetzheim H, Kratochwil C, et al. The Theranostic PSMA Ligand PSMA-617 in the Diagnosis of Prostate Cancer by PET/CT: Biodistribution in Humans, Radiation Dosimetry, and First Evaluation of Tumor Lesions. J Nucl Med. 2015; 56:1697-1705.)


Images were obtained with 68Ga-CA028 and 68Ga-CA030, respectively, which were applied via intravenous (either 339 MBq/20 nmol 68Ga-CA028 or 295 MBq/20 nmol 68Ga-CA030 per patient). The diagnostic examination of 68Ga-CA028 was conducted at the point of time after 1 h and 3 h injection. (See FIG. 14)


Diagnostic PSMA-PET/CT examinations were performed 1 h and 3 h after antecubital injection of 339 MBq/20 nmol 68Ga-CA028 or 295 MBq/20 nmol 68Ga-CA030 per patient, respectively. The method for assessing the biodistribution was performed as previously described by Afshar-Oromieh et al. (Afshar-Oromieh A, Hetzheim H, Kratochwil C, et al. The Theranostic PSMA Ligand PSMA-617 in the Diagnosis of Prostate Cancer by PET/CT: Biodistribution in Humans, Radiation Dosimetry, and First Evaluation of Tumor Lesions. J Nucl Med. 2015; 56:1697-1705). The activity distributions of the source organs were determined with the clinical standard software Syngo (Siemens), which was used to define the VOIs in the PET images. This reference, Afshar-Oromieh et al, was also used as a standard of reference for 68Ga-PSMA-617


In order to prove the clinical applicability of 68Ga-CA028 and 68Ga-CA030, PET/CT imaging in first patients was performed. The resulting images are illustrated in FIG. 13A and FIG. 13B. The imaging with 68Ga-CA028 and 68Ga-CA030 confirmed the results obtained in vitro and in the animal models. The PET scans and the SUVs were acquired with standard scanner settings, calibrated for pure positron emitters (Wadas T J, Pandya D N, Solingapuram Sai K K, Mintz A. Molecular targeted alpha-particle therapy for oncologic applications. AJR Am J Roentgenol. 2014; 203:253-260). The SUV-values obtained at 1 h versus 3 h post injection are presented in the following table. As reflected by these values a high and stable accumulation in the tumor is achieved.









TABLE







Safety dosimetry of diagnostic SUVmean values of 68Ga-CA028,



68Ga-PSMA-617 (values from Afshar-Oromieh et al., 2015 (P)) and




68Ga-CA030 and based on an adult male phantom in OLINDA.













68Ga-CA028


68Ga-PSMA-617


68Ga-CA030














Tissue
1 h
3 h
1 h
3 h
1 h
3 h
















Lacrimal gland
7.4
7.6
4.9
5.9
7.1
9.0


Nasal mucosa
2.9
3.5
2.9
3.4
3.3
3.8


Parotid gland
11.0
8.0
10.4
13.1
6.1
6.7


Submandibular gland
14.4
8.9
10
12.4
8.7
11.3


Sublingual gland
3.8
2.8
4.6
4.0
4.1
4.9


Blood pool, mediastinal
3.2
2.9
2.5
2.4
5.6
4.5


Liver
4.3
1.8
3.3
2.7
5.8
5.9


Spleen
5.1
2.5
4.3
3.5
7.2
6.1


Prox. Small intestine
8.4
10.4
4.7
5.5
4.1
5.0


Colon
4.9
4.2
3.5
4.0
4.9
4.7


Kidneys
13.8
10.9
15.6
17.0
13.4
16.5


Gluteal muscle
0.7
0.4
0.7
0.7
0.8
0.7


Bone met
4.5
4.1
9.4
6.3
27.2
37.7


Lymph node
13.5
10.7
7.1
13.5




Bone met
6.9
5.7


30.9
32.6


Bone met
4.6
4.4


31.0
33.1


Lymph node
17.0
25.4






Lymph node
5.0
4.1






Lung metastases
5.7
4.7












Claims
  • 1. A compound of formula (1)
  • 2. The compound of claim 1, wherein X comprises a residue selected from the group consisting of, optionally substituted, phenyl, biphenyl, indolyl and benzothiazolyl, more preferably, wherein X is selected from the group consisting of
  • 3. The compound of claim 1, wherein Z1, Z2 and Z3 are —CO2H and R1 is H.
  • 4. The compound of claim 1, wherein Y1 is
  • 5. The compound of claim 1, wherein i is 2 and j is 4, and wherein the compound has preferably the structure (1a)
  • 6. The compound of claim 1, wherein u and w are 1, and wherein Y3 is S, and wherein Y2 is
  • 7. The compound of claim 6, wherein A is a chelator selected from the group consisting of
  • 8. The compound of claim 1, wherein u is 0 and w is 1, and wherein A is selected from (Ia) or (Ib).
  • 9. The compound claim 8, wherein Y2 is
  • 10. The compound of claim 8, wherein A is selected from the group consisting of
  • 11. A complex comprising (a) a radionuclide, and(b) the compound of claim 1 or a salt thereof.
  • 12. The complex of claim 11, wherein, the radionuclide is selected from the group consisting of 89Zr, 44Sc, 111In, 90Y, 66Ga, 67Ga, 68Ga, 177Lu, 99mTc, 60Cu, 61Cu, 62Cu, 64Cu, 66Cu, 67Cu, 149Tb, 152Tb, 155Tb, 161Tb, 153Sm, 153Gd, 155Gd, 157Gd, 213Bi, 225Ac, 230U, 223Ra, 165Er, radionuclides of Fe and radionuclides of Pb.
  • 13. The complex of claim 11, wherein the radionuclide is a radioactive nuclide of lead (Pb) and A is
  • 14. The complex of claim 11, wherein the radionuclide is a radioactive nuclide of copper and A is
  • 15. A pharmaceutical composition comprising the compound of claim 1.
  • 16. A method for treating, ameliorating or preventing PSMA-expressing cancer and/or metastases thereof, in particular prostate cancer and/or metastases thereof, comprising administering to a subject in need a compound of claim 1.
  • 17. A pharmaceutical composition comprising the complex of claim 11.
  • 18. A method for treating, ameliorating or preventing PSMA-expressing cancer and/or metastases thereof, in particular prostate cancer and/or metastases thereof, comprising administering to a subject in need the complex of claim 11.
  • 19. A method for diagnosing PSMA-expressing cancer and/or metastases thereof, in particular prostate cancer and/or metastases thereof, comprising using a diagnostic method comprising the compound of claim 1.
  • 20. The compound of claim 2, wherein Z1, Z2 and Z3 are —CO2H and R1 is H, and wherein Y1 is
  • 21. The compound of claim 5, wherein Z1, Z2 and Z3 are —CO2H and R1 is H, and wherein Y1 is
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
18197704.2 Sep 2018 EP regional
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/EP2019/076267 9/27/2019 WO 00