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The Beginning and Development of the Theranostic Approach in Nuclear Medicine, as Exemplified by the Radionuclide Pair (86)Y and (90)Y

In the context of radiopharmacy and molecular imaging, the concept of theranostics entails a therapy-accompanying diagnosis with the aim of a patient-specific treatment. Using the adequate diagnostic radiopharmaceutical, the disease and the state of the disease are verified for an individual patient...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Rösch, Frank, Herzog, Hans, Qaim, Syed M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5490413/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28632200
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ph10020056
Descripción
Sumario:In the context of radiopharmacy and molecular imaging, the concept of theranostics entails a therapy-accompanying diagnosis with the aim of a patient-specific treatment. Using the adequate diagnostic radiopharmaceutical, the disease and the state of the disease are verified for an individual patient. The other way around, it verifies that the radiopharmaceutical in hand represents a target-specific and selective molecule: the “best one” for that individual patient. Transforming diagnostic imaging into quantitative dosimetric information, the optimum radioactivity (expressed in maximum radiation dose to the target tissue and tolerable dose to healthy organs) of the adequate radiotherapeutical is applied to that individual patient. This theranostic approach in nuclear medicine is traced back to the first use of the radionuclide pair (86)Y/(90)Y, which allowed a combination of PET and internal radiotherapy. Whereas the β-emitting therapeutic radionuclide (90)Y (t½ = 2.7 d) had been available for a long time via the (90)Sr/(90)Y generator system, the β(+) emitter (86)Y (t½ = 14.7 h) had to be developed for medical application. A brief outline of the various aspects of radiochemical and nuclear development work (nuclear data, cyclotron irradiation, chemical processing, quality control, etc.) is given. In parallel, the paper discusses the methodology introduced to quantify molecular imaging of (86)Y-labelled compounds in terms of multiple and long-term PET recordings. It highlights the ultimate goal of radiotheranostics, namely to extract the radiation dose of the analogue (90)Y-labelled compound in terms of mGy or mSv per MBq (90)Y injected. Finally, the current and possible future development of theranostic approaches based on different PET and therapy nuclides is discussed.