Title: Introduction to Nuclear Medicine
1Introduction to Nuclear Medicine
- Paul Benny
- Department of Chemistry
2Outline
- Review Radio and nuclear chemistry
- Part 1 Characteristics of a Radiopharmaceutical
- Part 2 Practical Applications of Radionuclides
3Radioactive Materials
- Unstable nuclides
- Combination of neutron and protons
- Emits particles and energy to become a more
stable isotope
4Radiation decay emissions
- Alpha (a or 4He2)
- Beta (b- or e-)
- Positron (b)
- Gamma (g)
- Neutrons (n)
5Half Life and Activity
- Radioactive decay is a statistical phenomenon
- t1/2
-
- l decay constant
- Activity
- The amount of radioactive material
6Interactions of Emissions
- Alpha (a or 4He)
- High energy over short linear range
- Charged 2
- Beta (b- or e-)
- Various energy, random motion
- negative
- Gamma (g)
- No mass,
- Positron (b)
- Energy gt1022 MeV, random motion
- Anihilation (2 511 MeV 180)
- Negative
- Neutrons (n)
- No charge,
7Part 1 Characteristics of a Radiopharmaceutical
- What is a radiopharmaceutical?
- A radioactive compound used for the diagnosis and
therapeutic treatment of human diseases.
Radionuclide Pharmaceutical
8Why use radioactive materials anyway?
- Radiotracers
- High sensitivity
- Radioactive emission (no interferences)
- Nuclear decay process
- Independent reaction
- No external effect (chemical or biochemical)
- Active Agent
- Monitor ongoing processes
9Ideal Characteristics of a Radiopharmaceutical
- Nuclear Properties
- Wide Availability
- Effective Half life (Radio and biological)
- High target to non target ratio
- Simple preparation
- Biological stability
- Cost
10Applications in Nuclear Medicine
- Imaging
- Gamma or positron emitting isotopes
- 99mTc, 111In, 18F, 11C, 64Cu
- Visualization of a biological process
- Cancer, myocardial perfusion agents
- Therapy
- Particle emitters
- Alpha, beta, conversion/auger electrons
- 188Re, 166Ho, 89Sr, 90Y, 212Bi, 225Ac, 131I
- Treatment of disease
- Cancer, restenosis, hyperthyroidism
11Ideal Nuclear Properties for Imagining Agents
- Reasonable energy emissions.
- Radiation must be able to penetrate several
layers of tissue. - No particle emission (Gamma only)
- Isomeric transition, b, electron capture
- High abundance
- Effective half life
- Cost
12Gamma Emitting Isotopes
- Gamma energy and half life depend upon individual
radionuclide. - Large variety of gamma ray energies
- Planar images (similar to an X-ray)
- Single photon emission computed tomography
(SPECT) - Kinetic Images
13Energy Requirements
- Best images between 100-250 KeV
- Limitations
- Detectors (NaI)
- Personnel (shielding)
- Patient dose
- What else happens at higher energies?
- Lower photoelectric peak abundance, due to
the Compton effect
Cs-137 decay (662 KeV)
Energy ?
14Gamma Isotopes
- Radionuclide T1/2 g ()
- Tc-99m 6.02 hr 140 KeV (89)
- Tl-201 73 hr 167 KeV (9.4)
- In-111 2.21 d 171(90), 245(94)
- Ga-67 78 hr 93 (40), 184 (20), 300(17)
- I-123 13.2 hr 159(83)
- I-131 8d 284(6), 364(81), 637(7)
- Xe-133 5.3 d 81(37)
1599mTc The workhorse of Nuclear Medicine Industry
- Imaging Radionuclide
- gt90 FDA approve imagining agents are 99mTc
- Versatile chemistry
- Ideal Nuclear characteristics
- T1/2 6.02 hr
- Gamma, 140 KeV (89)
- Internal conversion (11)
- Energy vs. effectiveness of the decay
- Availability (generator)
- 99Mo?99mTc
16Positron Emission Tomography
- b slows to thermal energies two 511KeV gammas
rays emitted approximately 180 to each other - Coincidence detection
- b travel some distance from the initial site
- Cyclotron produced
- Sharp images
- Quantitative
- Short Half Lives
17PET Isotopes
- Nuclide T1/2 Production
- Carbon-11 20.4 min 10B(d,n)11C
- Nitrogen-13 9.96 min 12C(d,n)13N
- Oxygen-15 2.05 min 14N(d,n)15O
- 16O(p,pn)15O
- 12C(a,n)15O
- Fluorine-18 110 min 18O(p,n)18F
- Copper-64 12.7 hrs 64Ni(p,n)64Cu
18PET vs. SPECT
- More complex and larger molecules
- Less quantitative
- Longer half lives
- Available world wide
- Less expensive
- No special production equipment needed
- Biologically useful isotopes
- 11C, 13N, 15O, 18F
- More Quantitative (b)
- Very short T1/2
- Very expensive
- On site cyclotron
19Production of Radionuclide
- Nuclear Reactor (neutrons)
- Neutron rich radioisotopes
- Alpha, Beta, gamma decay
- (n, g) reaction
- Cyclotron (charged particles)
- Proton rich
- Positron, electron capture
- (p,n), (d,n) reaction
- most common
20Availability of Radionuclides
- Site produced
- Reactor or cyclotron
- Limited by half life, facilities,
- Limited Shipping distance
- Generator system
- Portable system
- Reusable
21A generator facilitates the separation of two
radionuclides (parent and daughter) from each
other to yield a useable radioisotope (daughter)
for nuclear medicine studies.
- Transient equilibrium
- T1/2 daughter is less than 10 half lives than the
parent - Ad ld Ap e-lpt/(ld-lp)
- Secular equilibrium
- T1/2 of the parent much greater than 10 half
lives of the daughter. - Activity at equilibrium (Ap Ad)
- Cs-137 (T1/2 30 y) and Ba-137m (T1/2 2.5 min)
22Ideal Characteristics for a Generator
- Utilizes chemical characteristics of the parent
and the daughter radionuclide. - Output sterile and pyrogen free
- Biological pH
- Low radiation dose (Shielding)
- Inexpensive.
- Easy to produce.
- Simple elution method
- Reasonable half life of parent and daughter
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24Common Radiochemical generators
- Column Materials
- 1. Alumina (99Mo ? 99mTc)
- Zirconia
- (113Sn ? 113mIn)
- Cation exchange resin
- (81Rb ? 81mKr)
- Anion exchange resin
- (62Zn ? 62Cu)
- Stannic Oxide
- (82Sr ? 82Rb)
- Eluants
- 1. 0.9 NaCl
- (99Mo ? 99mTc)
- (82Sr ? 82Rb)
- 2. 0.05 N HCl
- (113Sn ? 113mIn)
- 3. O2 (81Rb ? 81mKr)
-
- 4. 1 N HCl 68Ge ? 68Ga)
25Mallinckrodt/Tyco 99mTc Generator
- High specific activity 99Mo from 235U fission
- Solid phase
- Alumina
- Liquid phase
- 0.9 saline
- Generator easy to use
- Reliable separation
26Effective Half life (Radio and biological)
- Nuclear Decay (T1/2)
- Inherent statistical decay of the nuclide
- Biological T1/2
- Uptake/washout of the radiopharmaceutical
- Equilibration
- Decomposition
- Biological and radionuclidic half lives should
be relative to optimize the effectiveness of the
drug.
27Practical Applications
- Simple preparation
- One step preparation of a kit
- Addition of nuclide and heating
- High yield (gt99)
- Cost
- Companies weigh benefit vs. expense
28High target to non target ratio
- Lower activity require for detector statistics
and visualization of target tissue. - Low dose to non target tissues
- Bone Marrow, gastro intestine
- Decreased probability of organ overlap
29Radiopharmaceuticals for Therapy
- Similar to imaging requirements
- Effective half life, high abundance, availability
etc. - Particle emitters
- a, b, auger, amd conversion electrons
- Particle energy
- Is higher better? LET
- Additional g rays help with determining
localization via external methods.
30Some Radionuclides for Therapy
- Radionuclide T1/2 Particle (MeV)
- Re-186 3.8 b- (1.07)
- Re-188 17 hrs b- (2)
- I-131 8 d b- (2)
- P-32 14.3 d b- (1.7)
- Sr-89 50.6 d b- (1.43)
- Sm-153 1.9 d b- (0.81)
- Bi-212 1 hr a (6.051)
31Method of Localization
- Active transport
- Phagocytosis (Liver uptake)
- Capillary blockade
- Simple/Exchange diffusion
- Compartmental Localization
- Chemisorption
- Antigen/Antibody reaction
32Several Types of Radiopharmaceuticals
- 1) Radioactive atom
- 131I- ,201Tl, 81mKr
- 2) Radioactive compound
- Covalent or coordination bond.
- I, C, or transition metals.
- Kinetically and thermodynamically favored.
- 3) Biological targeting motif linked radioactive
compound
33Methods of Labeling
- Direct labeling
- Non specific binding
- Antibodies, red blood cells
- Site specific
- Iodination (Tyr) , Methylation (amine, cys)
- Chelate
- Metal Ligand coordination complex
- Bifunctional Chelate
- Normal chelate with biological targeting agent
34Chelate Groups
- Mixture of coordination donor atoms
- N, O, S, P, etc.
- Geared to metal and oxidation state
- Monodentate to multi-dentate
- 1-8 coordination donors
- Variety of coordination modes
- Fac, mer, planar, equatorial, tetrahedral,
asymmetric
35Example Chelate Systems
- Various denticity (1-8)
- Variations of donor atoms (N,S,O,P)
- Metal chelate ring size
- Complex stability
- Combination of multiple ligands
- 22, 31,32
36Biological Target Design
Targeting Agent
Radionuclide
Biological Target
- Target a specific biological function
37Target Specific Radiopharmaceuticals
Biological target
- Targets (unique features)
- Cell surface receptors
- Transport mechanisms
- Proteins
- DNA/RNA
- Targeting Molecules
- Peptides
- Peptide mimics
- Small molecules
- Antibodies
38Types of Radiopharmaceuticals
- Small molecule
- Fast circulation
- Good specificity
- Less than 1,000 daltons
- Metal chelate considerable of mass
- Large molecule
- Slow circulation
- Excellent specificity
- Usually contains a biologically active motif
- Antibodies or fragments, B-12
- Metal chelate insignificant of mass
39Peptide Labeling
- Small peptides for specific receptors
- Easy to produce
- Greater number of variations to optimize the
system - Faster circulation through the body
- Maintains specificity.
- Better clearance
- Via kidneys rather than liver
40Labeling Antibodies
- High specificity to an antigen or binding site
- Large MW
- 50,000 daltons
- Labeling
- Direct non specific method (131I)
- Bifunctional chelate
- Mab fragments
- (F(ab)2, Fab)
- Similar immune response to Mab
Mab
F(ab)2
Fab
41So you want to inject your radiopharmaceuticals,
is it
- Quality Control
- Sterile
- No living things (i.e., spores, bacteria)
- Pyrogen free
- Fever causing agents
- Isotonic (ionic strength)
- Physiological pH (7.4)
- Calibrated for patient