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1.
Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom ; 32(16): 1331-1343, 2018 Aug 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29802654

ABSTRACT

RATIONALE: Natural organic matter (NOM) is present in the environment and could influence the migration of heavy metals/radionuclides. The dissolved fraction of NOM (DOM) is usually quantified using total organic carbon analysis or UV-visible spectrometry. Nonetheless, analysis using pattern recognition cannot provide the full spectrum of organic molecules contained in waters, especially low-molecular-weight compounds. In the context of nuclear performance assessment studies, ground waters may contain DOM and a key aspect is to quantify different categories of NOM types in order to further evaluate the transport and fate of radionuclides in the environment. METHODS: Thus, a method for the quantification of DOM at the molecular level was developed, based on electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). This method simultaneously gives structural information on DOM and the individual concentrations of these low-molecular-weight compounds without pretreatment and/or preconcentration of the samples. RESULTS: Several methods of quantification (internal calibration, calibrated addition of external standard, sequential tandem mass spectrometry) have been optimized and successfully applied to real natural samples. They are discussed in this paper with a focus on acidic compounds, which are the compounds that most probably could influence the migration of heavy metals and radionuclides in the clay rock pore water from the French Callovo-Oxfordian (COx) nuclear repository site. CONCLUSIONS: Quantification of in situ dissolved NOM from the COx has been performed using ESI-MS. For the first time to our knowledge, it was possible to give a quite exhaustive and quantitative inventory of the small organic compounds present without proceeding to any chemical treatment or sample crushing and for naturally occurring concentrations.

2.
Nanotechnology ; 28(5): 055705, 2017 Feb 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28029111

ABSTRACT

Chitosan CS-tripolyphosphate TPP/hyaluronic acid HA nanohydrogels loaded with gadolinium chelates (GdDOTA ⊂ CS-TPP/HA NGs) synthesized by ionic gelation were designed for lymph node (LN) MRI. In order to be efficiently drained to LNs, nanogels (NGs) needed to exhibit a diameter ϕ < 100 nm. For that, formulation parameters were tuned, using (i) CS of two different molecular weights (51 and 37 kDa) and (ii) variable CS/TPP ratio (2 < CS/TPP < 8). Characterization of NG size distribution by dynamic light scattering (DLS) and asymetrical flow-field-flow-fractionation (AF4) showed discrepancies since DLS diameters were consistently above 200 nm while AF4 showed individual nano-objects with ϕ < 100 nm. Such a difference could be correlated to the presence of aggregates inherent to ionic gelation. This point was clarified by atomic force microscopy (AFM) in liquid mode which highlighted the main presence of individual nano-objects in nanosuspensions. Thus, combination of DLS, AF4 and AFM provided a more precise characterization of GdDOTA ⊂ CS-TPP/HA nanohydrogels which, in turn, allowed to select formulations leading to NGs of suitable mean sizes showing good MRI efficiency and negligible toxicity.

3.
Appl Radiat Isot ; 212: 111451, 2024 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39084111

ABSTRACT

44Sc-radiopharmaceuticals are gaining more interest but still lack availability. The proof of principle of a44Ti/44Sc generator, which can produce 44Sc daily, has been established but with some limitations and drawbacks. Despite recent advances, separation of 44Ti from massive quantities of scandium target material is still cumbersome. In this work, the improved radiochemical separation of 44Ti from residual scandium target material was carried out by precipitation of Sc with fluoride ions. Furthermore, two approaches were used to set up a high apparent molar activity small-scale generator. The first method relied on extraction chromatography for fine purification using a DGA resin, followed by loading of the purified 44Ti onto a ZR resin column. In the second method, 44Ti was loaded on the ZR resin directly after the precipitation step. This second method was used to set up a generator of 370 kBq and evaluate by radiolabeling. An apparent molar activity of 2 MBq/nmol was obtained for the radiolabeling with DOTA, the most common and suitable chelate for scandium. This result is comparable with previously published data on 44 m/44Sc.

4.
EJNMMI Radiopharm Chem ; 6(1): 19, 2021 May 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34036449

ABSTRACT

In the frame of "precision medicine", the scandium radionuclides have recently received considerable interest, providing personalised adjustment of radiation characteristics to optimize the efficiency of medical care or therapeutic benefit for particular groups of patients. Radionuclides of scandium, namely scandium-43 and scandium-44 (43/44Sc) as positron emitters and scandium-47 (47Sc), beta-radiation emitter, seem to fit ideally into the concept of theranostic pair. This paper aims to review the work on scandium isotopes production, coordination chemistry, radiolabeling, preclinical studies and the very first clinical studies. Finally, standardized procedures for scandium-based radiopharmaceuticals have been proposed as a basis to pave the way for elaboration of the Ph.Eur. monographs for perspective scandium radionuclides.

5.
Dalton Trans ; 45(4): 1398-409, 2016 Jan 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26675416

ABSTRACT

The complexation ability of DOTA analogs bearing one methylenephosphonic (DO3AP) or methylenephosphinic (DO3AP(PrA) and DO3AP(ABn)) acid pendant arm toward scandium was evaluated. Stability constants of their scandium(iii) complexes were determined by potentiometry combined with (45)Sc NMR spectroscopy. The stability constants of the monophosphinate analogues are somewhat lower than that of the Sc-DOTA complex. The phosphorus acid moiety interacts with trivalent scandium even in very acidic solutions forming out-of-cage complexes; the strong affinity of the phosphonate group to Sc(iii) precludes stability constant determination of the Sc-DO3AP complex. These results were compared with those obtained by the free-ion selective radiotracer extraction (FISRE) method which is suitable for trace concentrations. FISRE underestimated the stability constants but their relative order was preserved. Nonetheless, as this method is experimentally simple, it is suitable for a quick relative comparison of stability constant values under trace concentrations. Radiolabelling of the ligands with (44)Sc was performed using the radioisotope from two sources, a (44)Ti/(44)Sc generator and (44m)Sc/(44)Sc from a cyclotron. The best radiolabelling conditions for the ligands were pH = 4, 70 °C and 20 min which were, however, not superior to those of the parent DOTA. Nonetheless, in vitro behaviour of the Sc(iii) complexes in the presence of hydroxyapatite and rat serum showed sufficient stability of (44)Sc complexes of these ligands for in vivo applications. PET images and ex vivo biodistribution of the (44)Sc-DO3AP complex performed on healthy Wistar male rats showed no specific bone uptake and rapid clearance through urine.


Subject(s)
Heterocyclic Compounds, 1-Ring/chemistry , Organometallic Compounds/chemical synthesis , Phosphorous Acids/chemistry , Scandium/chemistry , Thermodynamics , Titanium/chemistry , Animals , Ligands , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Male , Molecular Structure , Organometallic Compounds/chemistry , Potentiometry , Radioisotopes/chemistry , Rats , Rats, Wistar
6.
Nucl Med Biol ; 42(6): 524-9, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25794463

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Due to its longer half-life, (44)Sc (T1/2 = 3.97 h) as a positron emitter can be an interesting alternative to (68)Ga (T1/2 = 67.71 min). It has been already proposed as a PET radionuclide for scouting bone disease and is already available as a (44)Ti/(44)Sc generator. (44)Sc has an isomeric state, (44 m)Sc (T1/2 = 58.6 h), which can be co-produced with (44)Sc and that has been proved to be considered as an in-vivo PET generator (44 m)Sc/(44)Sc. This work presents the production route of (44 m)Sc/(44)Sc generator from (44)Ca(d,2n), its extraction/purification process and the evaluation of its performances. METHODS: Irradiation was performed in a low activity target station using a deuteron beam of 16 MeV, which favors the number of (44 m)Sc atoms produced simultaneously to (44)Sc. Typical irradiation conditions were 60 min at 0.2 µA producing 44 MBq of (44)Sc with a (44)Sc/(44 m)Sc activity ratio of 50 at end of irradiation. Separations of the radionuclides were performed by means of cation exchange chromatography using a DGA® resin (Triskem). Then, the developed process was applied with bigger targets, and could be used for preclinical studies. RESULTS: The extraction/purification process leads to a radionucleidic purity higher than 99.99% ((43)Sc, (46)Sc, (48)Sc < DL). (44 m)Sc/(44)Sc labeling towards DOTA moiety was performed in order to get an evaluation of the specific activities that could be reached with regard to all metallic impurities from the resulting source. Reaction parameters of radiolabeling were optimized, reaching yields over 95%, and leading to a specific activity of about 10-20 MBq/nmol for DOTA. A recycling process for the enriched (44)Ca target was developed and optimized. CONCLUSION: The quality of the final batch with regard to radionucleidic purity, specific activity and metal impurities allowed a right away use for further radiopharmaceutical evaluation. This radionucleidic pair of (44 m)Sc/(44)Sc offers a quite interesting PET radionuclide for being further evaluated as an in-vivo generator.


Subject(s)
Calcium Carbonate/chemistry , Cyclotrons , Deuterium/chemistry , Heterocyclic Compounds, 1-Ring/chemistry , Positron-Emission Tomography , Radiopharmaceuticals/chemistry , Scandium/chemistry , Chelating Agents/chemistry , Isotope Labeling
7.
Nucl Med Biol ; 41 Suppl: e36-43, 2014 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24361353

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Among the number of generator systems providing radionuclides with decay parameters promising for imaging and treatment applications, there is the (44)Ti (T1/2=60 years)/(44)Sc (T1/2=3.97 h) generator. This generator provides a longer-lived daughter for extended PET/CT measurements compared to the chemically similar system (68)Ge/(68)Ga. Scandium also exists as (47)Sc, a potential therapeutic radionuclide. It is possible to produce (44)Sc in a cyclotron using, for example, the (44)Ca (d, n) (44)Sc nuclear reaction. In that case, the isomeric state (44 m)Sc (T1/2=58.6h) is co-produced and may be used as an in vivo(44 m)Sc/(44)Sc generator. The aim of this study is to evaluate the feasibility of this in vivo(44 m)Sc/(44)Sc generator and to demonstrate that the daughter radionuclide stays inside the chelator after decay of the parent radionuclide. Indeed, the physico-chemical process occurring after the primary radioactive decay (EC, IT, Auger electron …) has prevented in many cases the use of in-vivo generator, because of the post-effect as described in the literature. METHODS: The DOTA macrocyclic ligand forms stable complexes with many cations and has been shown to be the most suitable chelating moiety for scandium. Initially, the radiolabeling of DOTA and a DOTA-peptide (DOTATATE) with Sc was performed and optimized as a function of time, pH, metal-to-ligand ratio and temperature. Next, the physico-chemical processes that could occur after the decay (post-effect) were studied. (44 m)Sc(III)-labeled DOTA-peptide was quantitatively adsorbed on a solid phase matrix through a hydrophobic interaction. Elutions were then performed at regular time intervals using a DTPA solution at various concentrations. Finally, the radiolabelled complex stability was studied in serum. RESULTS: Radiolabeling yields ranged from 90% to 99% for metal-to-ligand ratio ranging from 1:10 to 1:500 for DOTA or DOTATATE respectively. The optimum physico-chemical parameters were pH=4-6, t=20 min, T=70°C. Then, the (44 m)Sc-DOTATATE complex, radiolabeled at 98%, was adsorbed through a hydrophobic interaction to a solid phase. Unlabeled scandium was completely eluted from the column whereas the Sc-DOTATATE complex was 100% retained. The release of (44)Sc from the complex due to decay was less than 1% over 2 periods of (44 m)Sc, independent of the DTPA concentration used for elution. (44 m)Sc/(44)Sc-DOTATATE was stable in serum over 72 h. CONCLUSIONS: The results indicate that the decay of (44 m)Sc to (44)Sc does not affect the integrity of the radiolabeled compound. Thus the (44 m)Sc/(44)Sc generator is chemically valid and stable in serum. It could be used for PET imaging as an in-vivo generator increasing the life time of the scandium and allowing the use of antibody as labelled compound. Further in-vivo biological evaluations should complete this work.


Subject(s)
Heterocyclic Compounds, 1-Ring/chemistry , Isotope Labeling/methods , Octreotide/chemistry , Positron-Emission Tomography/methods , Radioisotopes , Scandium/chemistry , Cyclotrons , Drug Stability , Feasibility Studies , Isotope Labeling/instrumentation
8.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 327(2): 324-32, 2008 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18789451

ABSTRACT

The trivalent metal ion (M(III)=Cm, Eu)/polyacrylic acid (PAA) system was studied in the pH range between 3 and 5.5 for a molar PAA-to-metal ratio above 1. The interaction was studied for a wide range of PAA (0.05 mg L(-1)-50 g L(-1)) and metal ion concentrations (2x10(-9)-10(-3) M). This work aimed at 3 goals (i) to determine the stoichiometry of M(III)-PAA complexes, (ii) to determine the number of complexed species and the local environment of the metal ion, and (iii) to quantify the reaction processes. Asymmetric flow-field-flow fractionation (AsFlFFF) coupled to ICP-MS evidenced that size distributions of Eu-PAA complexes and PAA were identical, suggesting that Eu bound to only one PAA chain. Time-resolved laser fluorescence spectroscopy (TRLFS) measurements performed with Eu and Cm showed a continuous shift of the spectra with increasing pH. The environment of complexed metal ions obviously changes with pH. Most probably, spectral variations arose from conformational changes within the M(III)-PAA complex due to pH variation. Complexation data describing the distribution of complexed and free metal ion were measured with Cm by TRLFS. They could be quantitatively described in the whole pH-range studied by considering the existence of only a single complexed species. This indicates that the slight changes in M(III) speciation with pH observed at the molecular level do not significantly affect the intrinsic binding constant. The interaction constant obtained from the modelling must be considered as a mean interaction constant.

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