RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Correlation of 68Ga-FAPi-46 PET Biodistribution with FAP Expression by Immunohistochemistry in Patients with Solid Cancers: Interim Analysis of a Prospective Translational Exploratory Study JF Journal of Nuclear Medicine JO J Nucl Med FD Society of Nuclear Medicine SP 1021 OP 1026 DO 10.2967/jnumed.121.262426 VO 63 IS 7 A1 Mona, Christine E. A1 Benz, Matthias R. A1 Hikmat, Firas A1 Grogan, Tristan R. A1 Lueckerath, Katharina A1 Razmaria, Aria A1 Riahi, Rana A1 Slavik, Roger A1 Girgis, Mark D. A1 Carlucci, Giuseppe A1 Kelly, Kimberly A. A1 French, Samuel W. A1 Czernin, Johannes A1 Dawson, David W. A1 Calais, Jeremie YR 2022 UL http://jnm.snmjournals.org/content/63/7/1021.abstract AB Fibroblast activation protein (FAP)–expressing cancer-associated fibroblasts confer treatment resistance and promote metastasis and immunosuppression. Because FAP is overexpressed in many cancers, radiolabeled molecules targeting FAP are studied for their use as pancancer theranostic agents. This study aimed to establish the spectrum of FAP expression across various cancers by immunohistochemistry and to explore whether 68Ga FAP inhibitor (FAPi)–46 PET biodistribution faithfully reflects FAP expression from resected cancer and non-cancer specimens. Methods: We conducted a FAP expression screening using immunohistochemistry on a pancancer human tissue microarray (141 patients, 14 different types of cancer) and an interim analysis of a prospective exploratory imaging trial in cancer patients. Volunteer patients underwent 1 whole-body 68Ga-FAPi-46 PET/CT scan and, subsequently, surgical resection of their primary tumor or metastasis. 68Ga-FAPi-46 PET SUVmax and SUVmean was correlated with FAP immunohistochemistry score in cancer and tumor-adjacent non-cancer tissues for each patient. Results: FAP was expressed across all 14 cancer types on tissue microarray with variable intensity and frequency, ranging from 25% to 100% (mean, 76.6% ± 25.3%). Strong FAP expression was observed in 50%–100% of cancers of the bile duct, bladder, colon, esophagus, stomach, lung, oropharynx, ovary, and pancreas. Fifteen patients with various cancer types (colorectal [n = 4], head and neck [n = 3], pancreas [n = 2], breast [n = 2], stomach [n = 1], esophagus [n = 2], and uterus [n = 1]) underwent surgery after their 68Ga-FAPi-46 PET/CT scan within a mean interval of 16.1 ± 14.4 d. 68Ga-FAPi-46 SUVs and immunohistochemistry scores were higher in cancer than in tumor-adjacent non-cancer tissue: mean SUVmax 7.7 versus 1.6 (P < 0.001), mean SUVmean 6.2 versus 1.0 (P < 0.001), and mean FAP immunohistochemistry score 2.8 versus 0.9 (P < 0.001). FAP immunohistochemistry scores strongly correlated with 68Ga-FAPi 46 SUVmax and SUVmean: r = 0.781 (95% CI, 0.376–0.936; P < 0.001) and r = 0.783 (95% CI, 0.379–0.936; P < 0.001), respectively. Conclusion: In this interim analysis of a prospective exploratory imaging trial, 68Ga-FAPi-46 PET biodistribution across multiple cancers strongly correlated with FAP tissue expression. These findings support further exploration of FAPi PET as a pancancer imaging biomarker for FAP expression and as a stratification tool for FAP-targeted therapies.