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Automated light-induced synthesis of 89 Zr-radiolabeled antibodies for immuno-positron emission tomography.

Simon KlinglerJason P Holland
Published in: Scientific reports (2022)
Clinical production of 89 Zr-radiolabeled antibodies ( 89 Zr-mAbs) for positron emission tomography imaging relies on the pre-conjugation of desferrioxamine B (DFO) to the purified protein, followed by isolation and characterization of the functionalized intermediate, and then manual radiosynthesis. Although highly successful, this route exposes radiochemists to a potentially large radiation dose and entails several technological and economic hurdles that limit access of 89 Zr-mAbs to just a specialist few Nuclear Medicine facilities worldwide. Here, we introduce a fully automated synthesis box that can produce individual doses of 89 Zr-mAbs formulated in sterile solution in < 25 min starting from [ 89 Zr(C 2 O 4 ) 4 ] 4- ( 89 Zr-oxalate), our good laboratory practice-compliant photoactivatable desferrioxamine-based chelate (DFO-PEG 3 -ArN 3 ), and clinical-grade antibodies without the need for pre-purification of protein. The automated steps include neutralization of the 89 Zr-oxalate stock, chelate radiolabeling, and light-induced protein conjugation, followed by 89 Zr-mAb purification, formulation, and sterile filtration. As proof-of-principle, 89 ZrDFO-PEG 3 -azepin-trastuzumab was synthesized directly from Herceptin in < 25 min with an overall decay-corrected radiochemical yield of 20.1 ± 2.4% (n = 3), a radiochemical purity > 99%, and chemical purity > 99%. The synthesis unit can also produce 89 Zr-mAbs via the conventional radiolabeling routes from pre-functionalized DFO-mAbs that are currently used in the clinic. This automated method will improve access to state-of-the-art 89 Zr-mAbs at the many Nuclear Medicine and research institutions that require automated devices for radiotracer production.
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