Abstract
BackgroundFor multicenter clinical studies, PET/CT and SPECT/CT scanners need to be validated to ensure comparability between various scanner types and brands. This validation is usually performed using hollow phantoms filled with radioactive liquids. In recent years, 3D printing technology has gained increasing popularity for manufacturing of phantoms, as it is cost-efficient and allows preparation of phantoms of almost any shape. So far, however, direct 3D printing with radioactive building materials has not yet been reported. The aim of this work was to develop a procedure for preparation of 99mTc-containing building materials and demonstrate successful application of this material for 3D printing of several test objects.MethodThe desired activity of a [99mTc]pertechnetate solution eluted from a 99Mo/99mTc-generator was added to the liquid 3D building material, followed by a minute amount of trioctylphosphine. The resulting two-phase mixture was thoroughly mixed. Following separation of the phases and chemical removal of traces of water, the radioactive building material was diluted with the required volume of non-radioactive building material and directly used for 3D printing.ResultsUsing our optimized extraction protocol with trioctylphosphine as complex-forming phase transfer agent, technetium-99m was efficiently transferred from the aqueous 99Mo/99mTc-generator eluate into the organic liquid resin monomer. The observed radioactivity concentration ratio between the organic phase and the water phase was > 2000:1. The radioactivity was homogeneously distributed in the liquid resin monomer. We did not note differences in the 3D printing behavior of the radiolabeled and the unlabeled organic liquid resin monomers. Radio-TLC and SPECT studies showed homogenous 2D and 3D distribution of radioactivity throughout the printed phantoms. The radioactivity was stably bound in the resin, apart from a small amount of surface-extractable radioactivity under harsh conditions (ethanol at 50 °C).Conclusions3D printing of radioactive phantoms using 99mTc-containing building materials is feasible. Compared to the classical fillable phantoms, 3D printing with radioactive building materials allows manufacturing of phantoms without cold walls and in almost any shape. Related procedures with longer-lived radionuclides will enable production of phantoms for scanner validation and quality control.
Highlights
For multicenter clinical studies, positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) and single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT)/CT scanners need to be validated to ensure comparability between various scanner types and brands
We investigated the extraction of technetium-99m from aqueous [99mTc]pertechnetate solutions into the organic solvent n-butyl acetate, which could be mixed with the hydrophobic liquid resin monomers
We found that transfer of technetium-99m into the organic phase requires addition of the complex forming additive trioctylphosphine, as > 99% of total radioactivity was transferred to the organic phase in the presence of minute amounts of trioctylphosphine, while essentially all radioactivity remained in the water layer in the absence of trioctylphosphine
Summary
PET/CT and SPECT/CT scanners need to be validated to ensure comparability between various scanner types and brands This validation is usually performed using hollow phantoms filled with radioactive liquids. For evaluation and interpretation of imaging data, reliable standards for image acquisition, reconstruction, processing, and quantification are of utmost importance, in particular to assure the comparability of data acquired on different scanners or in different medical centers [5]. This issue becomes even more urgent in view of the growing number of therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals routinely applied in the clinic. The newly emerging theranostic approaches in nuclear medicine require proper dosimetry calculations [6], which in turn depend on the availability of accurate and reliable imaging data
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