Rapid low-cost production of contrast agents for metabolic imaging

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R21 · $218,771 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY Positron Emission Tomography (PET) with fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) has revolutionized molecular imaging and substantially improved diagnosis and monitoring response to treatment of many deadly diseases such as cancer. However, FDG-PET technology has a number of limitations including long examination time, long pre-scan fasting time, and the use ionizing radiation. Hyperpolarization of nuclear spins increases their alignment with the field of an MRI scanner by 4-6 orders of magnitude, resulting in corresponding gains in the MRI signal. As a result, it becomes possible to detect low-concentration metabolites in vivo. Furthermore, spectroscopic MRI enables detection of real-time metabolism of an injected exogenous hyperpolarized contrast agent because it can map the injected metabolic probe and its products. The entire hyperpolarized MRI scan is performed in approximately 1 minute. The leading hyperpolarized contrast agent is [1-13C]pyruvate, which probes the biochemical pathways of aberrant energy metabolism at the cellular level. This next-generation technology has the potential to revolutionize molecular imaging in the future. It is now being evaluated in nearly 30 clinical trials. The hyperpolarized state of [1-13C]pyruvate is currently produced at clinical-scale via dissolution Dynamic Nuclear Polarization (d-DNP) technology, which employs cryogenic temperature, high magnetic field, and high- power microwave irradiation. This technology is very slow: it takes approximately 1 hour to produce a clinical dose. Minor concerns are the high cost of over $2M and requirement for expensive cryogens for operation. Faster and more affordable approaches are needed to make hyperpolarized [1-13C]pyruvate accessible for widespread clinical use. In 2015, we have co-invented an alternative technology for low-cost production of metabolic probes called Signal Amplification by Reversible Exchange Enables Alignment Transfer to Heteronuclei (SABRE-SHEATH). In 2019-2022, we and others have demonstrated that hyperpolarized [1- 13C]pyruvate can be produced using this new technique, which relies on the simultaneous exchange of parahydrogen gas (the source of nuclear spin hyperpolarization) and [1-13C]pyruvate on metal complexes. Unlike d-DNP, SABRE-SHEATH is highly scalable, rapid (1 min) potentially allowing to produce over 10 doses per hour. Moreover, our collaboration has demonstrated the feasibility of removing the SABRE catalyst from hyperpolarized solutions to prepare catalyst-free solutions of hyperpolarized compounds. This proposal focuses on addressing the key remaining aspects of SABRE-SHEATH to prepare bio-compatible formulations of hyperpolarized [1-13C]pyruvate contrast agent. Specifically, the investigators will develop and optimize the instrumentation (based on an already commercialized prototype) that will integrate (1) clinical-scale (~1 g dose) production; (2) SABRE-catalyst extraction; and (3) reconstitution in a biocompatible buffer, fo...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10893309
Project number
5R21EB033872-02
Recipient
WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
Eduard Chekmenev
Activity code
R21
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$218,771
Award type
5
Project period
2023-09-01 → 2026-08-31