The present invention relates to a chemical synthesis apparatus in general and a radiochemical synthesis apparatus in particular.
Positron emission tomography (PET) is a nuclear medical imaging system that scans a body and creates a three-dimensional image of functional processes in the body. The system detects gamma rays emitted by a positron-emitting radioisotope, which is usually labeled through radiochemical synthesis on a biologically active molecule, or compound, to form a tracer. The tracer is introduced into the body. Three-dimensional images of tracer distribution within the body are then constructed by computer analysis.
The most commonly used PET tracer is fludeoxyglucose (FDG), an analogue of glucose. The distribution of FDG in the body is an indication of tissue metabolic activity by virtue of glucose uptake. So the PET scan of FDG can be used for abnormal metabolic diagnosis or early cancer detection. However, based on specific needs, many new biological active compounds are investigated in research facilities worldwide. Due to the short half-life of radioisotopes (109.8 minutes for fluorine-18, for example) and the diversity of the biological active compounds, the radiochemical synthesis of these tracers needs to be fast and flexible, whether is based on macro-scale reactor or micro-fluidics.
Chemical or radiochemical synthesis involves both energy transfer and mass transfer processes. Typical radiochemical synthesis systems comprises a reaction vessel 102, which is fixed on top of a temperature manipulating element 112, and is surrounded by a number of mass transfer lines 120 (
First, the energy transfer, which is usually in the form of a series of temperature transitions, is hardly a fast and efficient process for radiochemical synthesis. Ideally, temperature transition is instantaneous and then temperature stays at a pre-determined setting (130,
Second, the immobilization of the reaction vessel and the structure of multiple mass transfer lines make the system inflexible. Meanwhile, heavy use of liquid valves and metering devices in mass transfer lines makes the system expensive, complex and unreliable. Such systems are usually designed to synthesize a few tracers, even a single tracer. It is nearly impossible for such systems to synthesize a wide range of radiochemical products without substantial system modification.
For the foregoing reasons, there is a need for a fast and flexible radiochemical synthesis apparatus with improved energy and mass transfer efficiency.
The present invention discloses an apparatus that carries out multistep chemical or radiochemical processes through a spatial temperature manipulation approach. The apparatus comprises a reaction stage and a reagent stage. The reaction stage comprises a reaction vessel, a plurality of preconditioned temperature manipulating elements and a moving means. The moving means accommodates the reaction vessel and programmatically moves the reaction vessel to reach the preconditioned temperature manipulating elements. Each movement is equivalent to a step in radiochemical process. The whole radiochemical synthesis process can be automated. The reaction vessel can be removed after a single use, suggesting the apparatus can perform multiple runs a day. These and other features and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with reference to the following drawings, description and claims.
The details of the present invention, both its structure and operation, may be gleaned in part by the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numbers refer to like parts and arrows refer to movement directions of moving components, and in which:
A radiochemical synthesis needs a radioisotope and at least one reagent. A radiochemical synthesis may involve one or more reaction steps, generating a radioactive intermediate or a radiochemical product, which may be purified as a tracer. The present invention is directed to an apparatus that may be used to carry out multistep chemical or radiochemical processes. The apparatus comprises a reaction stage and a reagent stage. The reaction stage of the apparatus comprises a reaction vessel, a plurality of preconditioned temperature manipulating elements and a moving means. The moving means accommodates the reaction vessel and programmatically moves the reaction vessel to reach the preconditioned temperature manipulating elements using a step motor or similar device. Each movement is equivalent to a step in radiochemical process. The whole radiochemical process can be automated. This invention may be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided to ensure that this disclosure is thorough and complete, and to ensure that it fully conveys the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art.
The term “preconditioned” means certain condition is established before a particular operation. The term “preconditioned” also means certain material is prefilled before a particular operation. A preconditioned temperature manipulating element, for example, is an element that is preheated to a predetermined temperature before a reaction vessel reaches the element. To make temperature transition in a reaction vessel, simply move the reaction vessel to reach a preconditioned temperature manipulating element, or move the reaction vessel between two preconditioned temperature manipulating elements. Because the temperature manipulating element is preconditioned or preheated, the heating of the reaction vessel is faster than heating both the reaction vessel and the temperature manipulating element together. The heating is also more stable, considering the temperature fluctuation only occurs during the temperature transition, or at early stage of preconditioning.
In instrument design, people believe “less means more”. This invention, however, shows that sometimes the opposite is true. The use of more than one temperature manipulation element simplifies the design and operation. The use of low power heaters, as required to precondition the temperature manipulating element, also reduces the size of the apparatus.
With the combination of a plurality of preconditioned temperature manipulating elements and a moving means, temperature manipulation is no longer a traditional temporal process. It is rather a spatial process. The spatial temperature manipulation provides speed and stability. It should be noted that the same principle applies to fast cooling—simply move a hot reaction vessel to reach a preconditioned cooling element. Fast cooling of the reaction vessel can also be achieved by forced air after separating the preconditioned temperature manipulating element from the reaction vessel.
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The evaporation element 204, the filling element 302, the retrieving element 304, the reaction element (which comprises a sealing member 202) and the vessel removing element 402 are referred to below as the functional elements. Some of the functional elements may be modified or combined; or additional functional elements may be added.
Even though moving the reaction vessel 102 along a track is believed to be the best mode for present invention, the movement is relative—the preconditioned temperature manipulating elements 112 and the functional elements may be moved to reach the reaction vessel; or the reaction vessel 102, the preconditioned temperature manipulating elements 112 and the functional elements may be moved.
Additional moving means can be applied to mass transfer. Unlike the traditional multiline structure as illustrated in
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The at least one reagent vial 1004 may be sealed with a pierceable member 1014 to make vial movement safe and secure, to reduce reagent loss and to prevent contamination.
As a result of the moving structure, the number of mass transfer lines can be reduced. The number of reagents can be increased or decreased depending on the degree of complexity of a radiochemical synthesis. Furthermore, the time-consuming and wasteful cleaning is not necessary considering both the reaction vessel and the reagent vial can be easily removed after a single use, suggesting the radiochemical apparatus can perform multiple runs a day.
The moving means 206 can be designed to move more than one reaction vessel 102 for parallel processes. The moving means can be further modified for other devices such as cartridges, filters and the like, which can be sequentially or programmatically positioned for reagent, intermediate and product treatment.
Although the present invention has been described in considerable detail with reference to certain preferred versions thereof, other versions are possible. Therefore, the spirit and scope of the appended claims should not be limited to the description of the preferred versions contained therein.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/641,053 filed May 1, 2012, the contents of which is hereby incorporated in its entirety by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61641053 | May 2012 | US |