Objectives: The aim of this report was to characterize the key physicochemical, pharmacokinetic (PK), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) properties of gadoquatrane (BAY 1747846), a newly designed tetrameric, macrocyclic, extracellular gadolinium-based contrast agent (GBCA) with high relaxivity and stability.
Materials And Methods: The r1-relaxivities of the tetrameric gadoquatrane at 1.41 and 3.0 T were determined in human plasma and the nuclear magnetic relaxation dispersion profiles in water and plasma. The complex stability was analyzed in human serum over 21 days at pH 7.4 at 37°C and was compared with the linear GBCA gadodiamide and the macrocyclic GBCA (mGBCA) gadobutrol. In addition, zinc transmetallation assay was performed to investigate the kinetic inertness. Protein binding and the blood-to-plasma ratio were determined in vitro using rat and human plasma. The PK profile was evaluated in rats (up to 7 days postinjection). Magnetic resonance imaging properties were investigated using a glioblastoma (GS9L) rat model.
Results: The new chemical entity gadoquatrane is a macrocyclic tetrameric Gd complex with one inner sphere water molecule per Gd ( q = 1). Gadoquatrane showed high solubility in buffer (1.43 mol Gd/L, 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4), high hydrophilicity (logP -4.32 in 1-butanol/water), and negligible protein binding. The r1-relaxivity of gadoquatrane in human plasma per Gd of 11.8 mM -1 ·s -1 (corresponding to 47.2 mM -1 ·s -1 per molecule at 1.41 T at 37°C, pH 7.4) was more than 2-fold (8-fold per molecule) higher compared with established mGBCAs. Nuclear magnetic relaxation dispersion profiles confirmed the more than 2-fold higher r1-relaxivity in human plasma for the clinically relevant magnetic field strengths from 0.47 to 3.0 T. The complex stability of gadoquatrane at physiological conditions was very high. The observed Gd release after 21 days at 37°C in human serum was below the lower limit of quantification. Gadoquatrane showed no Gd 3+ release in the presence of zinc in the transmetallation assay. The PK profile (plasma elimination, biodistribution, recovery) was comparable to that of gadobutrol. In MRI, the quantitative evaluation of the tumor-to-brain contrast in the rat glioblastoma model showed significantly improved contrast enhancement using gadoquatrane compared with gadobutrol at the same Gd dose administered (0.1 mmol Gd/kg body weight). In comparison to gadoterate meglumine, similar contrast enhancement was reached with gadoquatrane with 75% less Gd dose. In terms of the molecule dose, this was reduced by 90% when compared with gadoterate meglumine. Because of its tetrameric structure and hence lower number of molecules per volume, all prepared formulations of gadoquatrane were iso-osmolar to blood.
Conclusions: The tetrameric gadoquatrane is a novel, highly effective mGBCA for use in MRI. Gadoquatrane provides favorable physicochemical properties (high relaxivity and stability, negligible protein binding) while showing essentially the same PK profile (fast extracellular distribution, fast elimination via the kidneys in an unchanged form) to established mGBCAs on the market. Overall, gadoquatrane is an excellent candidate for further clinical development.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/RLI.0000000000000889 | DOI Listing |
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimers Dement
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Background: Cerebral small vessel disease (cSVD), as defined by neuroimaging characteristics such as white matter hyperintensities (WMHs), cerebral microhemorrhages (CMHs), and lacunar infarcts, is highly prevalent and has been associated with dementia risk and other clinical sequelae. Although risk factors for cSVD have been identified, little is known about the biological processes and molecular mediators that influence cSVD development and progression.
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Alzheimers Dement
December 2024
Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, USA.
Background: Older vervet monkeys are an excellent model for studying age-associated Aβ deposition; however, they have high proportions of low-affinity Aβ sites compared to human brains. Commonly used Aβ PET radiotracers are most useful in detecting high affinity Aβ fibrils. Measuring real-time levels of low affinity Aβ fibrils through PET provides critical information of early AD progression.
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