Publications by authors named "Holger Dorrer"

The quantum-mechanical nuclear-shell structure determines the stability and limits of the existence of the heaviest nuclides with large proton numbers Z ≳ 100 (refs. ). Shell effects also affect the sizes and shapes of atomic nuclei, as shown by laser spectroscopy studies in lighter nuclides.

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Purpose: The L1 cell adhesion molecule (L1CAM) is considered a valuable target for therapeutic intervention in different types of cancer. Recent studies have shown that anti-L1CAM radioimmunotherapy (RIT) with (67)Cu- and (177)Lu-labelled internalising monoclonal antibody (mAb) chCE7 was effective in the treatment of human ovarian cancer xenografts. In this study, we directly compared the therapeutic efficacy of anti-L1CAM RIT against human ovarian cancer under equitoxic conditions with the radiolanthanide (177)Lu and the potential alternative (161)Tb in an ovarian cancer therapy model.

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Terbium-149 is among the most interesting therapeutic nuclides for medical applications. It decays by emission of short-range α-particles (Eα = 3.967 MeV) with a half-life of 4.

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Introduction: We assessed the suitability of the radiolanthanide (155)Tb (t1/2=5.32 days, Eγ=87 keV (32%), 105keV (25%)) in combination with variable tumor targeted biomolecules using preclinical SPECT imaging.

Methods: (155)Tb was produced at ISOLDE (CERN, Geneva, Switzerland) by high-energy (~1.

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Purpose: The radiolanthanide (161)Tb (T 1/2 = 6.90 days, Eβ(-) av = 154 keV) was recently proposed as a potential alternative to (177)Lu (T 1/2 = 6.71 days, Eβ(-) av = 134 keV) due to similar physical decay characteristics but additional conversion and Auger electrons that may enhance the therapeutic efficacy.

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Unlabelled: Terbium offers 4 clinically interesting radioisotopes with complementary physical decay characteristics: (149)Tb, (152)Tb, (155)Tb, and (161)Tb. The identical chemical characteristics of these radioisotopes allow the preparation of radiopharmaceuticals with identical pharmacokinetics useful for PET ((152)Tb) and SPECT diagnosis ((155)Tb) and for α- ((149)Tb) and β(-)-particle ((161)Tb) therapy. The goal of this proof-of-concept study was to produce all 4 terbium radioisotopes and assess their diagnostic and therapeutic features in vivo when labeled with a folate-based targeting agent.

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