Abstract

Cyclotron‐produced carbon‐11 is a highly valuable radionuclide for the production of positron emission tomography (PET) radiotracers. It is typically produced as relatively unreactive carbon‐11 carbon dioxide ([11C]CO2), which is most commonly converted into a more reactive precursor for synthesis of PET radiotracers.The development of [11C]CO2 fixation methods has more recently enabled the direct radiolabelling of a diverse array of structures directly from [11C]CO2, and the advantages afforded by the use of a loop‐based system used in 11C‐methylation and 11C‐carboxylation reactions inspired us to apply the [11C]CO2 fixation “in‐loop.” In this work, we developed and investigated a new ethylene tetrafluoroethylene (ETFE) loop‐based [11C]CO2 fixation method, enabling the fast and efficient, direct‐from‐cyclotron, in‐loop trapping of [11C]CO2 using mixed DBU/amine solutions. An optimised protocol was integrated into a proof‐of‐concept in‐loop flow radiosynthesis of N,N′‐[11C]dibenzylurea. This reaction exhibited an average 78% trapping efficiency and a crude radiochemical purity of 83% (determined by radio‐HPLC), giving an overall nonisolated radiochemical yield of 72% (decay‐corrected) within just 3 minutes from end of bombardment.This proof‐of‐concept reaction has demonstrated that efficient [11C]CO2 fixation can be achieved in a low‐volume (150 μL) ETFE loop and that this can be easily integrated into a rapid in‐loop flow radiosynthesis of carbon‐11–labelled products.This new in‐loop methodology will allow fast radiolabelling reactions to be performed using cheap/disposable ETFE tubing setup (ideal for good manufacturing practice production) thereby contributing to the widespread usage of [11C]CO2 trapping/fixation reactions for the production of PET radiotracers.

Highlights

  • Good manufacturing practice (GMP) requirements led us to opt for a single‐use disposable ethylene tetrafluoroethylene (ETFE)–based loop system since it obviates the need for rigorous cleaning etc

  • We demonstrated that cyclotron‐produced [11C]CO2 can be fixed in a low‐volume (150 μL) ETFE loop

  • We showed that while amine/diazabicyclo[5.4.0] undec‐7‐ene (DBU) solutions are chemically efficient [11C]CO2 fixation agents in‐vial, both the chemical and physical properties of these solutions determine their degree of loop trapping efficiency (Tloop)

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Summary

Introduction

One of the most prevalent and important radionuclides used in positron emission tomography (PET) is carbon‐ 11 (11C, t1/2 = 20.4 min); it has been incorporated into a wide variety of exogenous and endogenous ligands, used for both diagnostic and research purposes.[1,2,3,4,5] The short half‐life potentially allows the administration and scanning of multiple PET radiotracers in the same patient on the same day, thereby combining the advantages of imaging multiple biochemical pathways; in addition, it enables the labelling of biologically relevant molecules, without changing their pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties, by virtue of its isotopology with carbon‐12. Carbon‐11 is produced as [11C]CO2 (primary precursor), by the cyclotron proton‐bombardment of nitrogen‐ 14 via the 14N(p,α)11C nuclear reaction. There have been a variety of alternative secondary and tertiary 11C‐precursors developed to convert the poorly reactive [11C]CO2 into a more versatile toolbox for the 11C‐ radiochemist: [11C]CO, [11C]HCN, [11C]CS2, [11C] CH3OTf, and [11C]COCl2 are just a few examples.[1]

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