Literature DB >> 24285517

A perspective on tritium versus carbon-14: ensuring optimal label selection in pharmaceutical research and development.

Joel A Krauser1.   

Abstract

Tritium ((3) H) and carbon-14 ((14) C) labels applied in pharmaceutical research and development each offer their own distinctive advantages and disadvantages coupled with benefits and risks. The advantages of (3) H have a higher specific activity, shorter half-life that allows more manageable waste remediation, lower material costs, and often more direct synthetic routes. The advantages of (14) C offer certain analytical benefits and less potential for label loss. Although (3) H labels offer several advantages, they might be overlooked as a viable option because of the concerns about its drawbacks. A main drawback often challenged is metabolic liability. These drawbacks, in some cases, might be overstated leading to underutilization of a perfectly viable option. As a consequence, label selection may automatically default to (14) C, which is a more conservative approach. To challenge this '(14) C-by-default' approach, pharmaceutical agents with strategically selected (3) H-labeling positions based on non-labeled metabolism data have been successfully implemented and evaluated for (3) H loss. From in-house results, the long term success of projects clearly would benefit from a thorough, objective, and balanced assessment regarding label selection ((3) H or (14) C). This assessment should be based on available project information and scientific knowledge. Important considerations are project applicability (preclinical and clinical phases), synthetic feasibility, costs, and timelines.
Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  14C; 3H; carbon-14; isotope; label selection; metabolic stability; metabolic switching; pharmaceutical research and development; radiolabel; tritiated water; tritium

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24285517     DOI: 10.1002/jlcr.3085

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Labelled Comp Radiopharm        ISSN: 0362-4803            Impact factor:   1.921


  6 in total

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3.  Visible-Light-Enabled Aminocarbonylation of Unactivated Alkyl Iodides with Stoichiometric Carbon Monoxide for Application on Late-Stage Carbon Isotope Labeling.

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Review 4.  Six Decades of Research on Human Fetal Gonadal Steroids.

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5.  Highly Selective Directed Iridium-Catalyzed Hydrogen Isotope Exchange Reactions of Aliphatic Amides.

Authors:  Mégane Valero; Remo Weck; Stefan Güssregen; Jens Atzrodt; Volker Derdau
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6.  Comparison of Iridium(I) Catalysts in Temperature Mediated Hydrogen Isotope Exchange Reactions.

Authors:  Mégane Valero; Anurag Mishra; Jennifer Blass; Remo Weck; Volker Derdau
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  6 in total

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