Scalability study on 133LaLaCl3 production with a focus on potential clinical applications

In recent years, targeted alpha therapy has gained importance in the clinics, and in particular, the alpha-emitter 225Ac plays a fundamental role in this clinical development. Nevertheless, depending on the chelating system no real diagnostic alternative has been established which shares similar che...

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Published inEJNMMI radiopharmacy and chemistry Vol. 9; no. 1; p. 60
Main Authors Brühlmann, Santiago Andrés, Walther, Martin, Blei, Magdalena Kerstin, Mamat, Constantin, Kopka, Klaus, Freudenberg, Robert, Kreller, Martin
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 15.08.2024
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Summary:In recent years, targeted alpha therapy has gained importance in the clinics, and in particular, the alpha-emitter 225Ac plays a fundamental role in this clinical development. Nevertheless, depending on the chelating system no real diagnostic alternative has been established which shares similar chemical properties with this alpha-emitting radionuclide. In fact, the race to launch a diagnostic radionuclide to form a matched pair with 225Ac is still open, and 133La features attractive radiation properties to claim this place. However, in order to enable its translation into clinical use, upscaling of the production of this PET radionuclide is needed.BACKGROUNDIn recent years, targeted alpha therapy has gained importance in the clinics, and in particular, the alpha-emitter 225Ac plays a fundamental role in this clinical development. Nevertheless, depending on the chelating system no real diagnostic alternative has been established which shares similar chemical properties with this alpha-emitting radionuclide. In fact, the race to launch a diagnostic radionuclide to form a matched pair with 225Ac is still open, and 133La features attractive radiation properties to claim this place. However, in order to enable its translation into clinical use, upscaling of the production of this PET radionuclide is needed.A study on optimal irradiation parameters, separation conditions and an exhaustive product characterization was carried out. In this framework, a proton irradiation of 2 h, 60 µA and 18.7 MeV produced 133La activities of up to 10.7 GBq at end of bombardment. In addition, the performance of four different chromatographic resins were tested and two optimized purification methods presented, taking approximately 20 min with a 133La recovery efficiencies of over 98%, decay corrected. High radionuclide purity and apparent molar activity was proved, of over 99.5% and 120 GBq/µmol, respectively, at end of purification. Furthermore, quantitative complexation of PSMA-617 and mcp-M-PSMA were obtained with molar activities up to 80 GBq/µmol. In addition, both 133La-radioconjugates offered high stability in serum, of over (98.5 ± 0.3)% and (99.20 ± 0.08)%, respectively, for up to 24 h. A first dosimetry estimation was also performed and it was calculated that an 133La application for imaging with between 350 and 750 MBq would only have an effective dose of 2.1-4.4 mSv, which is comparable to that of 18F and 68Ga based radiopharmaceuticals.RESULTSA study on optimal irradiation parameters, separation conditions and an exhaustive product characterization was carried out. In this framework, a proton irradiation of 2 h, 60 µA and 18.7 MeV produced 133La activities of up to 10.7 GBq at end of bombardment. In addition, the performance of four different chromatographic resins were tested and two optimized purification methods presented, taking approximately 20 min with a 133La recovery efficiencies of over 98%, decay corrected. High radionuclide purity and apparent molar activity was proved, of over 99.5% and 120 GBq/µmol, respectively, at end of purification. Furthermore, quantitative complexation of PSMA-617 and mcp-M-PSMA were obtained with molar activities up to 80 GBq/µmol. In addition, both 133La-radioconjugates offered high stability in serum, of over (98.5 ± 0.3)% and (99.20 ± 0.08)%, respectively, for up to 24 h. A first dosimetry estimation was also performed and it was calculated that an 133La application for imaging with between 350 and 750 MBq would only have an effective dose of 2.1-4.4 mSv, which is comparable to that of 18F and 68Ga based radiopharmaceuticals.In this article we present an overarching study on 133La production, from the radiation parameters optimization to a clinical dose estimation. Lanthanum-133 activities in the GBq range could be produced, formulated as [133La]LaCl3 with high quality regarding radiolabeling and radionuclide purity. We believe that increasing the 133La availability will further promote the development of radiopharmaceuticals based on macropa or other chelators suitable for 225Ac.CONCLUSIONSIn this article we present an overarching study on 133La production, from the radiation parameters optimization to a clinical dose estimation. Lanthanum-133 activities in the GBq range could be produced, formulated as [133La]LaCl3 with high quality regarding radiolabeling and radionuclide purity. We believe that increasing the 133La availability will further promote the development of radiopharmaceuticals based on macropa or other chelators suitable for 225Ac.
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ISSN:2365-421X
2365-421X
DOI:10.1186/s41181-024-00292-w