Simone Krebs, Lisa Baird, Giacomo Pirovano, Aiko Yamaguchi, Ryan P Coll, Jason T Lee, Laurence S Carroll, Martin G Pomper, H Charles Manning
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As part of the \"Translation of New Therapy (TNT) Interest Group's Radiotheranostics Kick-off\" pre-meeting of the annual World Molecular Imaging Conference (WMIC) 2024 over 350 attendees with 10% leaders from industry, 60% senior and junior investigators in academia and 30% trainees discussed the key challenges and opportunities in implementing a theranostic research program in academia, which are addressed in this white paper. Overarching themes included funding, regulatory hurdles, and workforce training. Panel recommendations included leveraging existing expertise and patient populations, securing revenue streams, exploring alternative funding sources, and developing a multifaceted approach to promote training, education and public awareness, including fostering academic-industry partnerships. By shedding light on the gap between research and real-world program implementation, this white paper and forthcoming pre-meetings at WMIC aim to define a practical framework for building successful programs based on insights from recent research.</p>","PeriodicalId":18760,"journal":{"name":"Molecular Imaging and Biology","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.5000,"publicationDate":"2025-09-19","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Today's Research, Tomorrow's Practice - White Paper from the Translation of New Therapy (TNT) Radiotheranostics Kick-off Pre-meeting of the Annual World Molecular Imaging Conference 2024.\",\"authors\":\"Simone Krebs, Lisa Baird, Giacomo Pirovano, Aiko Yamaguchi, Ryan P Coll, Jason T Lee, Laurence S Carroll, Martin G Pomper, H Charles Manning\",\"doi\":\"10.1007/s11307-025-02054-9\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Theranostics, a concept combining \\\"therapy\\\" and \\\"diagnostics\\\", is poised to enter an exponential growth phase. 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Today's Research, Tomorrow's Practice - White Paper from the Translation of New Therapy (TNT) Radiotheranostics Kick-off Pre-meeting of the Annual World Molecular Imaging Conference 2024.
Theranostics, a concept combining "therapy" and "diagnostics", is poised to enter an exponential growth phase. By using specific diagnostic markers to guide the selection and application of targeted treatments directed at those markers, this approach aims to improve effectiveness and reduce unnecessary interventions. While several agents have been approved by the FDA recently, multiple additional theranostics are being developed, studied in clinical trials and expected to enter clinical practice in short order. As part of the "Translation of New Therapy (TNT) Interest Group's Radiotheranostics Kick-off" pre-meeting of the annual World Molecular Imaging Conference (WMIC) 2024 over 350 attendees with 10% leaders from industry, 60% senior and junior investigators in academia and 30% trainees discussed the key challenges and opportunities in implementing a theranostic research program in academia, which are addressed in this white paper. Overarching themes included funding, regulatory hurdles, and workforce training. Panel recommendations included leveraging existing expertise and patient populations, securing revenue streams, exploring alternative funding sources, and developing a multifaceted approach to promote training, education and public awareness, including fostering academic-industry partnerships. By shedding light on the gap between research and real-world program implementation, this white paper and forthcoming pre-meetings at WMIC aim to define a practical framework for building successful programs based on insights from recent research.
期刊介绍:
Molecular Imaging and Biology (MIB) invites original contributions (research articles, review articles, commentaries, etc.) on the utilization of molecular imaging (i.e., nuclear imaging, optical imaging, autoradiography and pathology, MRI, MPI, ultrasound imaging, radiomics/genomics etc.) to investigate questions related to biology and health. The objective of MIB is to provide a forum to the discovery of molecular mechanisms of disease through the use of imaging techniques. We aim to investigate the biological nature of disease in patients and establish new molecular imaging diagnostic and therapy procedures.
Some areas that are covered are:
Preclinical and clinical imaging of macromolecular targets (e.g., genes, receptors, enzymes) involved in significant biological processes.
The design, characterization, and study of new molecular imaging probes and contrast agents for the functional interrogation of macromolecular targets.
Development and evaluation of imaging systems including instrumentation, image reconstruction algorithms, image analysis, and display.
Development of molecular assay approaches leading to quantification of the biological information obtained in molecular imaging.
Study of in vivo animal models of disease for the development of new molecular diagnostics and therapeutics.
Extension of in vitro and in vivo discoveries using disease models, into well designed clinical research investigations.
Clinical molecular imaging involving clinical investigations, clinical trials and medical management or cost-effectiveness studies.