Literature DB >> 8961804

Pharmacokinetics of SPECT radiopharmaceuticals for imaging hypoxic tissues.

L I Wiebe1, D Stypinski.   

Abstract

Although hypoxia has been known for decades to play an important role in the outcome of radiotherapy in oncology, and inspite of the contribution of hypoxia to a myriad of pathologies that involve vascular disease, the selective imaging of hypoxic tissue has attained prominence only within the past decade. Contemporary research in the hypoxia imaging field is based largely on radiosensitizer research of the 1960's and 1970's. Early sensitizer research identified a family of nitro-organic compounds, the N-1 substituted 2-nitroimidazoles as candidate drugs. The early champion, and still the reference standard for therapeutic radiosensitization of hypoxic tumor cells is misonidazole (MISO). Its peripheral neurotoxicity led to failure in clinical studies, but its biological, biophysical and biochemical properties have been investigated in detail and serve as a basis for further design, not only of sensitizers, but of diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals for imaging tissue hypoxia. Pharmacokinetic characterization of radiopharmaceuticals, specifically radiopharmaceuticals for imaging tissue hypoxia, has not been a central theme in their development. The advent of PET, through which quantitative determinations first became possible, opened the field for both descriptive and analytical radiopharmacokinetic studies. In SPECT, however, this approach is still undergoing refinement. This paper addresses some of the underlying issues in radiopharmaceutical pharmacokinetics. There is a paucity of published radiopharmacokinetic data for SPECT hypoxia imaging agents. Consequently, the pharmacokinetic issues for MISO are presented as a basis for development of pharmacokinetics for the chemically-related imaging agents. Properties of an hypoxia marker are described from a pharmacokinetic viewpoint, a theoretical model for descriptive pharmacokinetics is introduced and finally, recent pharmacokinetic studies from our laboratory are described.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8961804

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Q J Nucl Med        ISSN: 1125-0135


  5 in total

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4.  Initial results of hypoxia imaging using 1-alpha-D: -(5-deoxy-5-[18F]-fluoroarabinofuranosyl)-2-nitroimidazole ( 18F-FAZA).

Authors:  Ernst J Postema; Alexander J B McEwan; Terence A Riauka; Piyush Kumar; Dacia A Richmond; Douglas N Abrams; Leonard I Wiebe
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5.  Synthesis and Biological Evaluation of Iodoglucoazomycin (I-GAZ), an Azomycin-Glucose Adduct with Putative Applications in Diagnostic Imaging and Radiotherapy of Hypoxic Tumors.

Authors:  Piyush Kumar; Hassan R H Elsaidi; Bohdarianna Zorniak; Evelyn Laurens; Jennifer Yang; Veena Bacchu; Monica Wang; Leonard I Wiebe
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  5 in total

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