The production and separation of 161Tb with high specific activity at the University of Utah

Targeted radiotherapy (TRT) is an increasingly prominent area of research in nuclear medicine, particularly in the context of treating cancerous tumors. One radionuclide of considerable interest for TRT is terbium-161 (t1/2 = 6.95 days), which undergoes beta emission and shares similar decay propert...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inApplied radiation and isotopes Vol. 214; p. 111530
Main Authors Holiski, Connor K., Bender, Aidan A., Monte, Peñafrancia F., Hennkens, Heather M., Embree, Mary F., Wang, Meng-Jen (Vince), Sjoden, Glenn E., Mastren, Tara
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.12.2024
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Targeted radiotherapy (TRT) is an increasingly prominent area of research in nuclear medicine, particularly in the context of treating cancerous tumors. One radionuclide of considerable interest for TRT is terbium-161 (t1/2 = 6.95 days), which undergoes beta emission and shares similar decay properties as 177Lu (FDA-approved as LUTATHERA® and PLUVICTO®). Besides beta emission, 161Tb also emits a significant number of conversion and Auger electrons further enhancing its therapeutic potential. Terbium-161 can be produced using nuclear reactors through an indirect neutron capture reaction, G64160dn,γG64161d→3.66min,β−T65161b, from 160Gd targets. However, a key challenge in utilizing 161Tb for TRT lies in effectively separating target and product materials to attain high specific activity for radiolabeling. Here, we detail the production of no-carrier added 161Tb using low flux research reactors (mean thermal (<0.625 eV) neutron flux: 1.356×1012n∙cm−2∙s−1) like the University of Utah TRIGA Reactor, using enriched 160Gd2O3 targets (1.5 ± 0.3 μCi of 161Tb per mg of 160Gd target per hour of irradiation). We also developed a separation technique based on cation exchange and extraction chromatography, suitable for mCi level irradiations with targets exceeding 200 mg. In a simulated full-scale irradiation, 161Tb was successfully isolated from large mass targets using cation exchange (AG 50W-X8, with 2-hydroxyisobutyric acid at 70 mM, pH 4.75) and extraction chromatography (LN Resin, 0.5–0.75 M HNO3) methods. This resulted in high apparent molar activities of [161Tb]Tb-DOTA (113 ± 3 MBq/nmol), demonstrating high purity 161Tb relevant for potential future preclinical applications. •Explored 161Tb production using natural and enriched 160Gd2O3 targets.•Investigated Gd/Tb separations via cation and extraction chromatography.•Isolated no-carrier added 161Tb with high apparent molar activities.•Applied methods large targets (>200 mg) with a SFGd/Tb of >104.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0969-8043
1872-9800
1872-9800
DOI:10.1016/j.apradiso.2024.111530