Abstract

[(18)F]Fluoromethylcholine ([(18)F]FCho) is a radiotracer generally used for tumour visualization in patients. Due to high levels of dimethylaminoethanol (DMAE) remaining in [(18)F]FCho solutions synthesized by currently available methods, tumour visualization might be compromised. An improved purification method involving an optimized purification step for reducing the levels of DMAE was conceived. The physiological explanation for the interference of residual DMAE in [(18)F]FCho pharmacokinetics was further elaborated in a xenograft mouse model. The use of a series of polymer solid-phase extraction cartridges (Oasis HLB/WCX), instead of the commonly used combination of tC18 and Accell CM cartridges, reduced DMAE levels from 402.2±49.6ppm to 3.0±0.5ppm. Subsequent in vitro tests proved that (1) [(18)F]FCho uptake was reduced in the presence of DMAE at concentrations above 0.5µM and (2) DMAE is a competitive inhibitor of [(18)F]FCho transport. In vivo experiments in xenograft mouse models corroborated reduced tumour uptake at DMAE plasma levels of about 2.5µM as found in patients injected with contaminated [(18)F]FCho. Residual DMAE, even at levels below choline plasma concentrations found during fasting, compromises [(18)F]FCho uptake in vivo and care should be taken to avoid its interference in molecular imaging with [(18)F]FCho.

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