Relevance of Palladium to Radiopharmaceutical Development Considering Enhanced Coordination Properties of TE1PA

The limited use of palladium-103 and -109 radionuclides for molecular radiotherapy is surely due to the lack of appropriate ligands capable of fulfilling all criteria required for application in nuclear medicine. Furthermore, the thermodynamic properties of these complexes in solution remain difficu...

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Published inChemistry : a European journal Vol. 28; no. 41
Main Authors Pineau, Julie, Lima, Luís M P, Platas-Iglesias, Carlos, Zeevaart, Jan Rijn, Driver, Cathryn H S, Le Bris, Nathalie, Tripier, Raphaël
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Wiley-VCH Verlag 20.07.2022
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Summary:The limited use of palladium-103 and -109 radionuclides for molecular radiotherapy is surely due to the lack of appropriate ligands capable of fulfilling all criteria required for application in nuclear medicine. Furthermore, the thermodynamic properties of these complexes in solution remain difficult to establish. The challenge is compounded when considering that radiolabeling of compounds for translation to clinical trials requires fast complexation. Thus, the coordination of Pd(II) and $^{103/109}$Pd-nuclides is a huge challenge in terms of molecular design and physicochemical characterization. Herein, we report a comprehensive study highlighting TE1PA, a monopicolinate cyclam – already established in nuclear imaging with $^{64}$Cu-PET (positron emission tomography) imaging tracers – as a highly relevant chelator for natural Pd and subsequently $^{109}$Pd-nuclide. The structural, thermodynamic, kinetic and radiolabeling studies of Pd(II) with TE1PA, as well as the comparison of this complex with three structurally related derivatives, support palladium-TE1PA radiopharmaceuticals as leading candidates for targeted nuclear medicine
ISSN:0947-6539
1521-3765
DOI:10.1002/chem.202200942