Folate Receptor Beta Found in Pediatric Tumors May Improve Fluorescence-Guided Cancer Surgery
Oct 20, 2025
Exciting new research uncovers the widespread presence of folate receptor beta in pediatric solid tumors, paving the way for innovative surgical techniques. This discovery could significantly enhance fluorescence-guided surgery, using the targeted imaging agent pafolacianine. Unlike existing dyes, which lack tumor specificity, pafolacianine may offer safer and more effective surgical options. The podcast also highlights a forthcoming clinical trial aimed at using this technology in children with metastatic lung tumors, promising a hopeful future for pediatric cancer surgery.
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insights INSIGHT
FRβ Is Widely Expressed In Pediatric Tumors
Researchers found folate receptor beta (FRβ) is widely expressed across pediatric solid tumors.
FRβ presence on tumor cells and microenvironment suggests a tumor-agnostic imaging target for surgery.
insights INSIGHT
Pafolacianine Offers Tumor-Specific Imaging
Pafolacianine targets folate receptors and offers tumor-specific fluorescence compared with indocyanine green.
This specificity could improve surgeon ability to detect small metastases during pediatric operations.
question_answer ANECDOTE
Study Tested 13 Pediatric Tumor Samples
The team analyzed tissue from 13 pediatric patients with diverse cancers including Wilms tumor and neuroblastoma.
They found FRβ in 100% of samples, prompting a pediatric clinical trial of pafolacianine for lung metastases.
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BUFFALO, NY – October 20, 2025 – A new #research paper was #published in Volume 16 of Oncotarget on October 16, 2025, titled “Widespread folate receptor expression in pediatric and adolescent solid tumors – opportunity for intraoperative visualization with the novel fluorescent agent pafolacianine.”
In this study, led by first author Ashley C. Dodd from Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital and corresponding author Timothy B. Lautz from the same institution and Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, researchers discovered that folate receptor beta (FRβ) is widely expressed in various pediatric and adolescent solid tumors. This finding highlights FRβ as a promising target for improving the accuracy of tumor surgery using a fluorescent imaging agent known as pafolacianine.
Pediatric cancers are often challenging to remove completely during surgery, particularly when tumors spread or form small metastases. Fluorescence-guided surgery is a method that helps surgeons better identify tumors during operations using special imaging dyes. However, commonly used dyes such as indocyanine green are not tumor-specific and rely on general features of blood vessel permeability, limiting their precision.
In this study, researchers investigated the potential of pafolacianine, a next-generation dye that targets folate receptors, for pediatric use. Folate receptors are proteins commonly found on the surface of cancer cells. Pafolacianine is already FDA-approved for adults with ovarian and lung cancers due to its ability to bind these receptors and highlight tumors during surgery.
The research team analyzed tissue samples from 13 young patients diagnosed with various cancers, including Wilms tumor, osteosarcoma, synovial sarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, Ewing sarcoma, and neuroblastoma. The results showed that FRα was predominantly absent, whereas FRβ was present in 100% of the tumor samples. Notably, FRβ appeared both on the tumor cells and in the surrounding tumor microenvironment but showed little to no expression in normal tissue, making it an excellent candidate for targeted imaging.
“In this study, we performed immunohistochemistry staining on slides obtained from a range of pediatric patients with solid tumors.”
This consistent expression of FRβ in pediatric tumors is a significant and novel finding. Earlier studies primarily linked FRβ to immune cells called tumor-associated macrophages. This study reveals that FRβ is also expressed directly on tumor tissue, which could help surgeons better distinguish cancer from healthy tissue during procedures.
Based on these results, the team has launched a clinical trial to evaluate pafolacianine in children undergoing surgery for metastatic lung tumors. If successful, this method could make pediatric cancer surgery safer and more effective.
Overall, this study suggests that targeting FRβ with pafolacianine could serve as a tumor-agnostic imaging strategy, applicable across a wide range of pediatric solid tumors. This represents a potential advancement in real-time surgical imaging and a step forward in pediatric cancer care.
DOI - https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.28772
Correspondence to - Timothy B. Lautz - TLautz@luriechildrens.org
Abstract video - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0its0QkOcwM
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