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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Potential use of 68Ga-apo-transferrin as a PET imaging agent for detecting Staphylococcus aureus infection.

Robert Howman-gilesRobert Howman-gilesDilip K. BoddetiDilip K. BoddetiFrank RoeschScott EvansVijay KumarVijay KumarVijay Kumar

subject

MaleCancer ResearchPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyBiodistributionStaphylococcus aureusMicrococcaceaeInflammationGalliumGallium RadioisotopesPharmacologyStaphylococcal infectionsmedicine.disease_causeLesionmedicineAnimalsRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingRats WistarProteus mirabilischemistry.chemical_classificationbiologybusiness.industryTransferrinStaphylococcal Infectionsbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseIn vitroRatschemistryStaphylococcus aureusTransferrinPositron-Emission TomographyMolecular Medicinemedicine.symptombusinessApoproteinsProteus Infections

description

Abstract Introduction 67 Ga citrate has been extensively used to detect infection and inflammation since 1971. However, its clinical utility is compromised due to several limitations. The present project explored whether 68 Ga- apo -transferrin ( 68 Ga-TF), when prepared in vitro, is a useful agent for positron emission tomography (PET) imaging of bacterial infection. Methods An infection was induced in male Wistar rats by injecting 5×10 5 CFU units of Staphyococcus aureus in the right thigh muscle. 68 Ga-TF was synthesized by mixing 68 GaCl 3 with apo -transferrin (TF, 2 mg) in sodium carbonate (0.1 M, pH 7.0) and incubating at 40°C for 1 h. Animals were injected with 10–15 MBq of 68 Ga-TF containing approximately 0.2 mg TF and imaged at different time intervals using Siemens Biograph PET-CT. Results When 68 Ga-TF were injected in the infected rats, the infection lesion was detectable within 20 min post injection. The biodistribution showed the uptake at the lesion increased with time as shown by significantly increased standard uptake values for up to 4 h post injection. There was a considerable decrease in the background activity during the same period of study, giving higher target-to-muscle ratios. Blood pool activity at 3 h post injection was insignificant. 68 GaCl 3 (when not conjugated to TF) did not localize at the infection lesion up to 120 min post injection. Conclusion The preliminary results suggest that 68 Ga-TF is capable of detecting S. aureus infection in the rat model, within an hour after intravenous injection.

10.1016/j.nucmedbio.2010.09.011https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21492788