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Isotopic Radiolabeling of Crizotinib with Fluorine-18 for In Vivo Pet Imaging.

Malvika SardanaLouise BreuilSébastien GoutalMaud GoislardMikhail KondrashovEtienne MarchalFlorent L BessonChristophe DugaveGail WrigleyAnna C JonsonBertrand KuhnastMagnus SchouNicolas TournierCharles S ElmoreFabien Caillé
Published in: Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Crizotinib is a tyrosine kinase inhibitor approved for the treatment of non-small-cell lung cancer, but it is inefficient on brain metastases. Crizotinib is a substrate of the P-glycoprotein, and non-invasive nuclear imaging can be used to assess the brain penetration of crizotinib. Positron emission tomography (PET) imaging using fluorine-18-labeled crizotinib would be a powerful tool for investigating new strategies to enhance the brain distribution of crizotinib. We have synthesized a spirocyclic hypervalent iodine precursor for the isotopic labeling of crizotinib in a 2.4% yield. Because crizotinib is an enantiomerically pure drug, a chiral separation was performed to afford the (R) -precursor. A two-step radiolabeling process was optimized and automated using the racemic precursor to afford [ 18 F] (R,S) -crizotinib in 15 ± 2 radiochemical yield and 103 ± 18 GBq/µmol molar activity. The same radiolabeling process was applied to the (R) -precursor to afford [ 18 F] (R) -crizotinib with comparable results. As a proof-of-concept, PET was realized in a single non-human primate to demonstrate the feasibility of [ 18 F] (R) -crizotinib in in vivo imaging. Whole-body PET highlighted the elimination routes of crizotinib with negligible penetration in the brain (SUVmean = 0.1). This proof-of-concept paves the way for further studies using [ 18 F] (R) -crizotinib to enhance its brain penetration depending on the P-glycoprotein function.
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