Nuclear Medicine and Biology
Volume 36, Issue 5 , Pages 569-574, July 2009

Optimization of automated large-scale production of [18F]fluoroethylcholine for PET prostate cancer imaging

  • Giancarlo Pascali

      Affiliations

    • Faculty of Medicine, University of Pisa, 56100 Pisa, Italy
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +39 050993121; fax: +39 050993637.
  • ,
  • Luca D'Antonio

      Affiliations

    • Nuclear Medicine, IRCCS-Ospedale Maggiore, 20122 Milan, Italy
  • ,
  • Paola Bovone

      Affiliations

    • Nuclear Medicine, IRCCS-Ospedale Maggiore, 20122 Milan, Italy
  • ,
  • Paolo Gerundini

      Affiliations

    • Nuclear Medicine, IRCCS-Ospedale Maggiore, 20122 Milan, Italy
  • ,
  • Thorsten August

      Affiliations

    • Eckert and Ziegler EURO-PET Berlin GmbH, 12435 Berlin, Germany

Received 9 October 2008; received in revised form 2 January 2009; accepted 5 January 2009. published online 31 March 2009.

Abstract 

Introduction

PET tumor imaging is gaining importance in current clinical practice. FDG-PET is the most utilized approach but suffers from inflammation influences and is not utilizable in prostate cancer detection. Recently, 11C-choline analogues have been employed successfully in this field of imaging, leading to a growing interest in the utilization of 18F-labeled analogues: [18F]fluoroethylcholine (FEC) has been demonstrated to be promising, especially in prostate cancer imaging. In this work we report an automatic radiosynthesis of this tracer with high yields, short synthesis time and ease of performance, potentially utilizable in routine production sites.

Methods

We used a Modular Lab system to automatically perform the two-step/one-pot synthesis. In the first step, we labeled ethyleneglycolditosylate obtaining [18F]fluoroethyltosylate; in the second step, we performed the coupling of the latter intermediate with neat dimethylethanolamine. The final mixture was purified by means of solid phase extraction; in particular, the product was trapped into a cation-exchange resin and eluted with isotonic saline.

Results

The optimized procedure resulted in a non decay corrected yield of 36% and produced a range of 30–45 GBq of product already in injectable form. The product was analyzed for quality control and resulted as pure and sterile; in addition, residual solvents were under the required threshold.

Conclusion

In this work, we present an automatic FEC radiosynthesis that has been optimized for routine production. This findings should foster the interest for a wider utilization of this radiomolecule for imaging of prostate cancer with PET, a field for which no gold-standard tracer has yet been validated.

Keywords: Fluoroethylcholine, FEC, Prostate cancer, PET, Radiosynthesis, Modular Lab

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PII: S0969-8051(09)00005-5

doi:10.1016/j.nucmedbio.2009.01.004

Nuclear Medicine and Biology
Volume 36, Issue 5 , Pages 569-574, July 2009