| Literature DB >> 28106830 |
Alessandra Boschi1, Petra Martini2,3, Licia Uccelli4.
Abstract
The favorable nuclear properties of rhenium-188 for therapeutic application are described, together with new methods for the preparation of high yield and stable <span class="Chemical">188Re radiopharmaceuticals characterized by the presence of the nitride rhenium core in their final chemical structure. 188Re is readily available from an 188W/188Re generator system and a parallelism between the general synthetic procedures applied for the preparation of nitride technetium-99m and rhenium-188 theranostics radiopharmaceuticals is reported. Although some differences between the chemical characteristics of the two metallic nitrido fragments are highlighted, it is apparent that the same general procedures developed for the labelling of biologically active molecules with technetium-99m can be applied to rhenium-188 with minor modification. The availability of these chemical strategies, that allow the obtainment, in very high yield and in physiological condition, of 188Re radiopharmaceuticals, gives a new attractive prospective to employ this radionuclide for therapeutic applications.Entities:
Keywords: bioconjugates; peptides; radionuclide therapy; radiopharmaceuticals; rhenium-188; theranostics
Year: 2017 PMID: 28106830 PMCID: PMC5374416 DOI: 10.3390/ph10010012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Selected β emitters for radionuclide therapy [1,3,4].
| Radionuclides | Half-Life (T1/2) | Eβmax (keV) * | Rβmax (mm) # |
|---|---|---|---|
| 67Cu | 61.9 h | 575 | 2.1 |
| 165Dy | 2.3 h | 1285 | 5.9 |
| 166Ho | 28.8 h | 1854 | 9.0 |
| 131I | 8.0 d | 606 | 2.3 |
| 90Y | 64.1 h | 2284 | 11.3 |
| 177Lu | 6.7 d | 497 | 1.8 |
| 32P | 14.3 d | 1710 | 8.2 |
| 186Re | 3.8 d | 1077 | 4.8 |
| 188Re | 17.0 h | 2120 | 10.4 |
| 89Sr | 50.5 d | 1491 | 7.0 |
* Maximum energy of β particles emitted; # Maximum range of β particles emitted.
Figure 1Scheme of the general procedure used for the preparation of high yield 99mTc and 188Re radiopharmaceuticals. L represents a particular ligand able to coordinate the metal in a low oxidation state. The addition of oxalate in the 188Re procedure allows the preparation of the analogs’ compound in physiological solution.
Figure 2Two step procedure for the preparation of the nitride complex [188Re][Re(N)(R2NCS2)2], R = –CH 2CH3.
Figure 3Production of 99mTc-NLC by the 3-step procedure schematized in the figure. The lipid mixture, constituted of the tristearin/miglyol plus 99mTcN-DBODC2 complex is melted at 80 °C; an aqueous poloxamer 188 solution is added. The two-phase system is high-speed stirred and subsequently ultrasonicated. After cooling at room temperature, the nanoparticle suspension has a homogeneous milky appearance [38].
Figure 4Examples of monophosphine ligands.
Figure 5Schematic nitrido 188Re “3+1” complex. The circle represents a general bioactive molecule that may be chemically conjugated to the 𝜋-donor SNS-type ligand.
Figure 6(A) Uptake of avidin by tumor cells (schematic representation). Avidin is a charged protein and is avidly taken up by tumor cells because these latter have a strong electrical gradient across their membranes. Avidin is administered in situ by the surgeon after removal of the primary tumor [51]; (B) Interaction of radiolabeled biotin with avidin. The subsequent injection of radiolabeled biotin intravenously 16–48 h after surgery led this compound to reach tumor cells and to interact specifically with avidin deposited on the outer membrane; (C) 188ReN-biotin “3+1” compounds; (D) (triscyanoethyl)phosphine (PCN) and 1,3,5-triaza-7 phosphaadamantane (PTA).