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Innovative Target for Production of Technetium-99m by Biomedical Cyclotron.
Skliarova, Hanna; Cisternino, Sara; Cicoria, Gianfranco; Marengo, Mario; Palmieri, Vincenzo.
Affiliation
  • Skliarova H; Legnaro National Laboratories, Italian National Institute for Nuclear Physics (LNL-INFN), Viale dell'Università 2, 35020 Legnaro PD, Italy. Hanna.Skliarova@lnl.infn.it.
  • Cisternino S; Legnaro National Laboratories, Italian National Institute for Nuclear Physics (LNL-INFN), Viale dell'Università 2, 35020 Legnaro PD, Italy. Sara.Cisternino@lnl.infn.it.
  • Cicoria G; Medical Physics Department, University Hospital "S. Orsola-Malpighi", 40100 Bologna, Italy. cicoria.gianfranco@aou.mo.it.
  • Marengo M; Medical Physics Department, University Hospital "S. Orsola-Malpighi", 40100 Bologna, Italy. mario.marengo@unibo.it.
  • Palmieri V; Legnaro National Laboratories, Italian National Institute for Nuclear Physics (LNL-INFN), Viale dell'Università 2, 35020 Legnaro PD, Italy.
Molecules ; 24(1)2018 Dec 21.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30577612
ABSTRACT
Technetium-99m (99mTc) is the most used radionuclide worldwide in nuclear medicine for diagnostic imaging procedures. 99mTc is typically extracted from portable generators containing 99Mo, which is produced normally in nuclear reactors as a fission product of highly enriched Uranium material. Due to unexpected outages or planned and unplanned reactor shutdown, significant 99mTc shortages appeared as a problem since 2008 The alternative cyclotron-based approach through the 100Mo(p,2n)99mTc reaction is considered one of the most promising routes for direct 99mTc production in order to mitigate potential 99Mo shortages. The design and manufacturing of appropriate cyclotron targets for the production of significant amounts of a radiopharmaceutical for medical use is a technological challenge. In this work, a novel solid target preparation method was developed, including sputter deposition of a dense, adherent, and non-oxidized Mo target material onto a complex backing plate. The latter included either chemically resistant sapphire or synthetic diamond brazed in vacuum conditions to copper. The target thermo-mechanical stability tests were performed under 15.6 MeV proton energy and different beam intensities, up to the maximum provided by the available GE Healthcare (Chicago, IL, USA) PET trace medical cyclotron. The targets resisted proton beam currents up to 60 µA (corresponding to a heat power density of about 1 kW/cm²) without damage or Mo deposited layer delamination. The chemical stability of the proposed backing materials was proven by gamma-spectroscopy analysis of the solution obtained after the standard dissolution procedure of irradiated targets in H2O2.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Technetium / Cyclotrons Language: En Journal: Molecules Journal subject: BIOLOGIA Year: 2018 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Italy

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Technetium / Cyclotrons Language: En Journal: Molecules Journal subject: BIOLOGIA Year: 2018 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Italy