Evaluation of copper(II)-pyruvaldehyde bis (N-4-methylthiosemicarbazone) for tissue blood flow measurement usina a trapped tracer model |
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Authors: | Helen Young Paul Carnochan Jamal Zweit John Babich Simon Cherry Robert Ott |
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Affiliation: | (1) Joint Department of Physics, Royal Marsden Hospital and Institute of Cancer Research, Downs Road, SM2 5PT Sutton, Surrey, UK;(2) Present address: Division of Nuclear Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, 02114 Boston, MA, USA;(3) Present address: Division of Nuclear Medicine and Biophysics, UCLA School of Medicine, 90024 Los Angeles, CA, USA |
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Abstract: | Copper(II)-pyruvaldehyde bis (N-4-methylthiosemicarbazone) (Cu-PTSM) labelled with 62,64Cu is a promising radiotracer for the study of blood flow using positron emission tomography (PET). We have investigated the application of a simple trapped tracer model to measurements of tissue 64Cu-PTSM uptake combined with continuous arterial sampling. A dual-tracer method was used to compare blood flow estimated by 64Cu-PTSM with values derived from measurements using cobalt-57 microspheres in the rat. Prolonged retention of 64Cu-PTSM following intravenous administration was initially confirmed in both normal tissues and tumours. After intraventricular 64Cu-PTSM infusion, cumulative arterial 64Cu activity increased progressively, and after extraction in n-octanol was found to plateau to levels corresponding with those reached following administration of 57CO microspheres. Rapid and species-dependent rates of 64Cu-PTSM decomposition to non-extractable 64Cu complexes were found in rat and human blood in vitro (70%±6% and 43%±5% respectively at 16 min), demonstrating the need for immediate processing of arterial samples. Close agreement was found between blood flow estimated by 64Cu-PTSM and 57CO microsphere methods in tissues of low to moderate flow: muscle (0.01, 0.08, 0.07 ml/min per gram; mean difference, mean 64Cu, mean 57Co), brain (0.09, 0.52, 0.43 ml/min per gram) and kidney (–0.16, 2.29, 2.45 ml/min per gram). Estimates of cardiac output also compared favourably between the two methods (5.7, 59.8, 54.1 ml/min). We conclude that a simple tissue trapping model may be suitable for the derivation of blood flow estimates using 62,64Cu-PTSM, PET imaging and continuous arterial blood sampling.Correspondence to: P. Carnochan |
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Keywords: | Cu-PTSM Blood flow Microspheres Arterial sampling |
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