Theranostics

Also known as nuclear medicine therapy, peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT) or radioligand therapy

Key points about theranostics

  • Theranostics is a form of personalised medicine that combine diagnostics to “see” the cancer and therapy to “treat” cancers.
  • The term comes from therapeutics and diagnostics
  • In the diagnostic phase a radioactive tracer is injected into the blood stream. It travels around your body and the tumour it’s designed to detect can be visualised with a PET scanner.
  • In the treatment phase a different radioactive material or isotope is used to target and kill the cancer cells by delivering short range but damaging radiation.
  • Cancer specific targeting reduces the risk of damage to surrounding tissue and organs.
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Theranostics is an emerging form of personalised imaging and treatment in the field of nuclear medicine. Nuclear medicine – commonly known as molecular imaging – uses a radioactive tracer and a “camera” in a specialised scanner to detect sites of disease. Read more about nuclear medicine.

Theranostics combines the diagnosis and visualisation of a specific cancer and therapy or treatment directed to the specific cancer type. The term is a combination of therapeutic and diagnostics.


Diagnostic phase

To identify sites of cancer in the body, a small amount of a radioactive substance (a radiotracer) is injected into your body through a cannula placed into a vein in your arm.

The radiotracer then travels through your bloodstream around your body. The radiotracer is designed to attach to specific types of cancer cells, such as prostate cancer cells, that may have spread (metastasised) to other parts of your body. The radiotracer doesn’t damage the cancer cells but enables them to be seen on a PET scanner. Radiologists or nuclear medicine specialists are highly trained doctors who specialise in interpreting these images. They'll use these images to help decide whether the treatment is right for you and help you choose your best treatment.  


Therapeutic phase

Once cancer cells have been identified, they can then be destroyed with a more powerful injectable radioactive material (medical isotope). The isotope is combined with a protein that seeks out the cancer cells. It can then deliver the radiation “payload” to the cancer cells and cause cancer cell death by damaging the cancer DNA.

A similar scanning approach can be used later on to see how well the treatment has worked.

Theranostics is particularly useful when cancer has spread (metastasised) from the original source organ to other parts of your body. It can be difficult to find where it’s spread to but by using advanced imaging techniques such as PET/CT, which combines PET and CT scans, the tumour sites can be found and potentially targeted.

Specific conditions that can be treated with theranostics in Aotearoa New Zealand include:

  • prostate cancer
  • neuroendocrine tumours
  • meningiomas.

The therapy currently used for treating advanced prostate cancer is called Lutetium-177 PSMA therapy(external link).

There are 2 main advantages:

  • By combining the diagnosis and treatment together, tumours can be visualised and assessed to see if they're suited to theranostics treatment. The cancer sites can then be targeted with a damaging medical isotope.
  • Treatment targets the cancer cells specifically by delivering radiation directly to the place it’s needed. This means that other healthy tissue and organs are spared.

Theranostics has been shown to improve people’s quality of life and life expectancy, although it is currently used in a palliative setting and not considered to be curative treatment. 

The treatment is more targeted than other approaches, such as chemotherapy, therefore the side effects from the treatment also tend to be relatively mild.

However, there are still some possible side effects of theranostics treatment including:

  • tiredness
  • reduction in number of blood cells in your body
  • nausea (feeling sick)
  • dry mouth.

Side effects may be different for different people. Your healthcare team will talk to you about the possible side effects and how to manage them.

Resources

Lutetium-177 PSMA therapy(external link) Mercy Radiology, NZ

References

  1. What is theranostics?(external link) Iowa Health Care, US, 2018
  2. Theranostics(external link) City of Hope Cancer Center, US, 2023
  3. How theranostics seeks, finds, and destroys metastatic cancer(external link) UTSouthwestern Medical Center, US, 2023
  4. Nuclear medicine therapy(external link) Mercy Radiology, NZ

Credits: Healthify editorial team. Healthify is brought to you by Health Navigator Charitable Trust.

Reviewed by: Dr Remy Lim, Medical Director, Mercy Radiology

Last reviewed: