A single-site prospective open-label clinical study with cyclotron-produced sodium Tc-pertechnetate (Tc-NaTcO) was performed in patients with indications for a thyroid scan to demonstrate the clinical safety and diagnostic efficacy of the drug and to confirm its equivalence with conventional Tc-NaTcO eluted from a generator. Tc-NaTcO was produced from enriched Mo (99.815%) with a cyclotron (24 MeV; 2 h of irradiation) or supplied by a commercial manufacturer (bulk vial eluted from a generator). Eleven patients received 325 ± 29 (mean ± SD) MBq of the cyclotron-produced Tc-NaTcO, whereas the age- and sex-matched controls received a comparable amount of the generator-derived tracer. Whole-body and thyroid planar images were obtained for each participant. In addition to the standard-energy window (140.5 keV ± 7.5%), data were acquired in lower-energy (117 keV ± 10%) and higher-energy (170 keV ± 10%) windows. Vital signs and hematologic and biochemical parameters were monitored before and after tracer administration. Cyclotron-produced Tc-NaTcO showed organ and whole-body distributions identical to those of conventional Tc-NaTcO and was well tolerated. All images led to a clear final diagnosis. The fact that the number of counts in the higher-energy window was significantly higher for cyclotron-produced Tc-NaTcO did not influence image quality in the standard-energy window. Image definition in the standard-energy window with cyclotron-produced Tc was equivalent to that with generator-eluted Tc and had no particular features allowing discrimination between the Tc production methods. The systemic distribution, clinical safety, and imaging efficacy of cyclotron-produced Tc-NaTcO in humans provide supporting evidence for the use of this tracer as an equivalent for generator-eluted Tc-NaTcO in routine clinical practice.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.2967/jnumed.116.178509 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!