4.7 Article

Effects of administration route on uptake kinetics of 18F-sodium fluoride positron emission tomography in mice

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-85073-0

Keywords

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Funding

  1. British Heart Foundation (BHF) [BHF PG/17/83/33370, FS/19/34/34354, RE/13/3/30183]
  2. Edinburgh Preclinical Imaging

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Intraperitoneal injection of F-8-NaF is a valid and practical alternative to intra-vascular injections in small-animal imaging, providing equivalent pharmacokinetic data. CT outcome measures report on established calcification sites while PET measures sites of higher complexity and active calcification.
F-18-sodium fluoride (F-18-NaF) is a positron emission tomography (PET) radiotracer widely used in skeletal imaging and has also been proposed as a biomarker of active calcification in atherosclerosis. Like most PET radiotracers, F-18-NaF is typically administered intravenously. However in small animal research intravenous administrations can be challenging, because partial paravenous injection is common due to the small calibre of the superficial tail veins and repeat administrations via tail veins can lead to tissue injury therefore limiting the total number of longitudinal scanning points. In this paper, the feasibility of using intra-peritoneal route of injection of F-8-NaF to study calcification in mice was studied by looking at the kinetic and uptake profiles of normal soft tissues and bones versus intra-vascular injections. Dynamic PET was performed for 60 min on nineteen isoflurane-anesthetized male Swiss mice after femoral artery (n=7), femoral vein (n=6) or intraperitoneal (n=6) injection of F-8-NaF. PET data were reconstructed and the standardised uptake value (SUV) and standardised uptake value ratio (SUVr) were estimated from the last three frames between 45- and 60-min and F-8-NaF uptake constant (K-i) was derived by Patlak graphical analysis. In soft tissue, the F-18-NaF perfusion phase changes depending on the type on injection route, whereas the uptake phase is similar regardless of the administration route. In bone tissue SUV, SUVr and K-i measures were not significantly different between the three administration routes. Comparison between PET and CT measures showed that bones that had the highest CT density displayed the lowest PET activity and conversely, bones where CT units were low had high F-8-NaF uptake. Intraperitoneal injection is a valid and practical alternative to the intra-vascular injections in small-animal F-18-NaF PET imaging providing equivalent pharmacokinetic data. CT outcome measures report on sites of stablished calcification whereas PET measures sites of higher complexity and active calcification.

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