| Literature DB >> 26029696 |
Cyrille Alliot1, Nadia Audouin2, Jacques Barbet1, Anne-Cecile Bonraisin2, Valérie Bossé1, Cécile Bourdeau2, Mickael Bourgeois1, Charlotte Duchemin3, Arnaud Guertin3, Ferid Haddad4, Sandrine Huclier-Markai3, Rabah Kerdjoudj3, Johan Laizé2, Vincent Métivier3, Nathalie Michel4, Marcel Mokili4, Mickael Pageau2, Aurélien Vidal2.
Abstract
With the recent interest on the theranostic approach, there has been a renewed interest for alternative radionuclides in nuclear medicine. They can be produced using common production routes, i.e., using protons accelerated by biomedical cyclotrons or neutrons produced in research reactors. However, in some cases, it can be more valuable to use deuterons as projectiles. In the case of Cu-64, smaller quantities of the expensive target material, Ni-64, are used with deuterons as compared with protons for the same produced activity. For the Sc-44m/Sc-44g generator, deuterons afford a higher Sc-44m production yield than with protons. Finally, in the case of Re-186g, deuterons lead to a production yield five times higher than protons. These three examples show that it is of interest to consider not only protons or neutrons but also deuterons to produce alternative radionuclides.Entities:
Keywords: copper-64; deuteron; radionuclide production; rhenium-186; scandium-44; theranostic
Year: 2015 PMID: 26029696 PMCID: PMC4426787 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2015.00031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Characteristics of the beams available at Arronax.
| Beam | Accelerated particles | Energy range (MeV) | Intensity (μAe) | Number of simultaneous extracted beams |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Protons | H− | 30–70 | <375 | 2 |
| HH+ | Fixed 17 | <50 | 1 | |
| Deuterons | D− | 15–35 | <50 | 2 |
| α-Particles | He++ | Fixed 68 | <70 | 1 |
Figure 1Schematic view of the ARRONAX cyclotron and its target vaults.
Figure 2Sc-44g production cross section for proton and deuteron-induced reaction on Ca-44. The symbols correspond to the proton data of Levkovskij (8), the full line to TALYS calculation for protons and dashed line to TALYS calculation for deuterons. TALYS 1.6 has been used for these calculations.
Evolution of the cross-section ratio as a function of the proton incident energy (.
| E (MeV) | 6 | 9 | 12 | 15 | 18 | 21 | 24 | 30 | 40 | 50 | 60 | 72 | 85 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| σ(Sc-44m)/(σ(Sc-44g) | 0.015 | 0.063 | 0.090 | 0.140 | 0.20 | 0.24 | 0.23 | 0.19 | 0.16 | 0.14 | 0.15 | 0.16 | 0.17 |
Figure 3Ratio of the cross section associated to Sc-44m over the cross-section associated to Sc-44g obtained from the TALYS code.
Figure 4Production cross-section as a function of the projectile energy for Ni-64(p,n)Cu-64 (left) and Ni-64(d,2n)Cu-64 (right). Inspired by Ref. (17).
Cu-64 calculated yields for (p,n) and (d,2n) production routes.
| Nuclear reaction | Energy range (MeV) | Calculated yield (MBq/μAh) | Target thickness (μm) | Target thickness at 15°(μm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ni-64(p,n)Cu-64 | 12–9 | 228 | 120 | 31.05 |
| Ni-64(d,2n)Cu-64 | 16–13 | 206 | 90 | 23.29 |
Direct and indirect productions of stable copper isotopes with a deuteron beam on Ni-64.
| Isotope | Half-life | Decay product | Expected yield (EOB) atoms |
|---|---|---|---|
| 65Ni | 2.52 h | 65Cu | 2.33 E + 12 |
| 63Cu | Stable | – | 2.07E + 11 |
| 65Cu | Stable | – | 6.1 E + 11 |
| 65Ni decays during irradiation | 3,3 E + 11 | ||
| 64Cu | 12.7 h | Ni-64 | 1.31 E + 13 |
Figure 5Re-186g thick-target yield obtained from IAEA (. Symbols correspond to values extracted from Hermann et al. (21) and Bonardi et al. (22).