Abstract

Synthesis of ultrasmall, citrate functionalized and intrinsically radiolabeled [198Au]Au nanoparticles ([198Au]Au NPs) below 5 nm diameter in a polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) microreactor is reported. The radioactive gold precursor along with trisodiumcitrate were premixed and infused into a PTFE microbore tube kept immersed inside a hot oil bath using a syringe pump. The synthesized [198Au]Au NPs were mostly spherical in shape. Systematic studies were conducted to investigate effect of residence time, reaction temperature and citrate to gold ratio on the average particle size of the nanoparticles. The radioactive nanoparticles demonstrated excellent radiochemical stability under both in vitro and in vivo conditions. Biodistribution studies of the ultrasmall [198Au]Au NPs in healthy Wistar rats showed fast clearance of the formulation (>85%ID at 24 h post-injection) predominantly through renal route, with its elimination half-life comparable to that of clinically used small molecule-based radiopharmaceuticals. Overall, this strategy of synthesis of ultrasmall intrinsically radiolabeled nanoparticles in a microreactor will potentially lay down the foundation for further development of renal clearable inorganic radionanomedicines with minimized toxicity for clinical translation.

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