Improved radiolabeling of DOTATOC with trivalent radiometals for clinical application by addition of ethanol

Abstract Background Typically, metal-based radiopharmaceuticals are synthesized in aqueous solutions with no or low ethanol content. Labeling yields are defined by temperature, period of labeling, amount of precursor, pH etc. As recently observed, radiolabeling yields (RCY) seem to increase in the p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Elisabeth Eppard, Marylaine Pèrez-Malo, Frank Rösch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2016-04-01
Series:EJNMMI Radiopharmacy and Chemistry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41181-016-0010-8
_version_ 1819178279338246144
author Elisabeth Eppard
Marylaine Pèrez-Malo
Frank Rösch
author_facet Elisabeth Eppard
Marylaine Pèrez-Malo
Frank Rösch
author_sort Elisabeth Eppard
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Typically, metal-based radiopharmaceuticals are synthesized in aqueous solutions with no or low ethanol content. Labeling yields are defined by temperature, period of labeling, amount of precursor, pH etc. As recently observed, radiolabeling yields (RCY) seem to increase in the presence of non-aqueous solvents. Consequently, this effect was investigated systematically using ethanol as non-aqueous solvent (n-as), which is widely utilized in medicine, and DOTATOC as model compound. Methods To determine the impact of ethanol on the radiolabeling efficacy, “standard” labeling conditions of 68Ga-DOTATOC (95–100 °C, 10–15 min, 20–50 μg DOTATOC, aqueous solution), i.e. 10 nmol (2.9 μM, 14.2 μg), were modified in terms of lower temperature (70 °C) to achieve lower RCY (<75 %). From those lower RCY, positive effects of increasing amounts of ethanol (0–40 vol%) could directly be observed. Labeling parameters were finally evaluated in terms of shorter reaction time and lower amount of precursor. To investigate whether the effects observed are also true for other trivalent radiometals, labeling was also performed with 44Sc. Results For increasing amounts of ethanol, 68Ga-DOTATOC RCY at 70 °C improved significantly. RCY of ~95 % can be achieved within 10 min using 30 vol% ethanol compared to 46 % in the pure aqueous system. If “standard” temperatures of 95 °C are applied, high RCY of 89 % can be achieved within 5 min with much lower amounts of precursor, i.e. even at 0.93 nmol (0.3 μM, 1.3 μg). This also represents significantly increased specific activities. Similar behavior was observed for 44Sc where RCY increase successively with increasing amounts of ethanol. Conclusion There is clear experimental evidence, that adding more than 20 vol% ethanol to the reaction mixtures significantly improve labeling efficacies. This could be demonstrated for 68Ga-DOTATOC and 44Sc-DOTATOC in terms of temperature, time and concentration of required precursor. Whether this is a principal phenomenon with practical impact on the radiopharmaceutical chemistry of trivalent metals and whether this applies to other non-aqueous solvents as well - and what the physico-chemical reasons are, remains to be studied in more detail. Nevertheless, the effect observed here will improve 68Ga-DOTATOC labeling and may save at least half of the usually applied amount of precursor.
first_indexed 2024-12-22T21:40:01Z
format Article
id doaj.art-a7d1e48a09834a40802a737ef1c43e6a
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2365-421X
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-22T21:40:01Z
publishDate 2016-04-01
publisher SpringerOpen
record_format Article
series EJNMMI Radiopharmacy and Chemistry
spelling doaj.art-a7d1e48a09834a40802a737ef1c43e6a2022-12-21T18:11:39ZengSpringerOpenEJNMMI Radiopharmacy and Chemistry2365-421X2016-04-011111310.1186/s41181-016-0010-8Improved radiolabeling of DOTATOC with trivalent radiometals for clinical application by addition of ethanolElisabeth Eppard0Marylaine Pèrez-Malo1Frank Rösch2Department of Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital BonnInstitute of Nuclear Chemistry, Johannes Gutenberg-UniversityInstitute of Nuclear Chemistry, Johannes Gutenberg-UniversityAbstract Background Typically, metal-based radiopharmaceuticals are synthesized in aqueous solutions with no or low ethanol content. Labeling yields are defined by temperature, period of labeling, amount of precursor, pH etc. As recently observed, radiolabeling yields (RCY) seem to increase in the presence of non-aqueous solvents. Consequently, this effect was investigated systematically using ethanol as non-aqueous solvent (n-as), which is widely utilized in medicine, and DOTATOC as model compound. Methods To determine the impact of ethanol on the radiolabeling efficacy, “standard” labeling conditions of 68Ga-DOTATOC (95–100 °C, 10–15 min, 20–50 μg DOTATOC, aqueous solution), i.e. 10 nmol (2.9 μM, 14.2 μg), were modified in terms of lower temperature (70 °C) to achieve lower RCY (<75 %). From those lower RCY, positive effects of increasing amounts of ethanol (0–40 vol%) could directly be observed. Labeling parameters were finally evaluated in terms of shorter reaction time and lower amount of precursor. To investigate whether the effects observed are also true for other trivalent radiometals, labeling was also performed with 44Sc. Results For increasing amounts of ethanol, 68Ga-DOTATOC RCY at 70 °C improved significantly. RCY of ~95 % can be achieved within 10 min using 30 vol% ethanol compared to 46 % in the pure aqueous system. If “standard” temperatures of 95 °C are applied, high RCY of 89 % can be achieved within 5 min with much lower amounts of precursor, i.e. even at 0.93 nmol (0.3 μM, 1.3 μg). This also represents significantly increased specific activities. Similar behavior was observed for 44Sc where RCY increase successively with increasing amounts of ethanol. Conclusion There is clear experimental evidence, that adding more than 20 vol% ethanol to the reaction mixtures significantly improve labeling efficacies. This could be demonstrated for 68Ga-DOTATOC and 44Sc-DOTATOC in terms of temperature, time and concentration of required precursor. Whether this is a principal phenomenon with practical impact on the radiopharmaceutical chemistry of trivalent metals and whether this applies to other non-aqueous solvents as well - and what the physico-chemical reasons are, remains to be studied in more detail. Nevertheless, the effect observed here will improve 68Ga-DOTATOC labeling and may save at least half of the usually applied amount of precursor.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41181-016-0010-8DOTATOCEthanolRadiolabelingRadiopharmaceuticalsKit
spellingShingle Elisabeth Eppard
Marylaine Pèrez-Malo
Frank Rösch
Improved radiolabeling of DOTATOC with trivalent radiometals for clinical application by addition of ethanol
EJNMMI Radiopharmacy and Chemistry
DOTATOC
Ethanol
Radiolabeling
Radiopharmaceuticals
Kit
title Improved radiolabeling of DOTATOC with trivalent radiometals for clinical application by addition of ethanol
title_full Improved radiolabeling of DOTATOC with trivalent radiometals for clinical application by addition of ethanol
title_fullStr Improved radiolabeling of DOTATOC with trivalent radiometals for clinical application by addition of ethanol
title_full_unstemmed Improved radiolabeling of DOTATOC with trivalent radiometals for clinical application by addition of ethanol
title_short Improved radiolabeling of DOTATOC with trivalent radiometals for clinical application by addition of ethanol
title_sort improved radiolabeling of dotatoc with trivalent radiometals for clinical application by addition of ethanol
topic DOTATOC
Ethanol
Radiolabeling
Radiopharmaceuticals
Kit
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41181-016-0010-8
work_keys_str_mv AT elisabetheppard improvedradiolabelingofdotatocwithtrivalentradiometalsforclinicalapplicationbyadditionofethanol
AT marylaineperezmalo improvedradiolabelingofdotatocwithtrivalentradiometalsforclinicalapplicationbyadditionofethanol
AT frankrosch improvedradiolabelingofdotatocwithtrivalentradiometalsforclinicalapplicationbyadditionofethanol