Abstract:
INTRODUCTION: Nuclear medicine infection imaging is routinely performed with the
use of leukocytes radiolabelled with technetium-99m hexamethylpropyleneamine
oxime ([99mTc]Tc-HMPAO) and single-photon emission computed tomography
(SPECT). Positron emission tomography (PET) is more sensitive than SPECT and
results in higher-quality images. Zirconium-89 (89Zr) is a positron emitter with a
half-life of 78.4 h, which translates to the biological half-life and slow
biodistribution of intact cells and allows delayed PET imaging for more accurate
biodistribution of the labelled leukocytes to infection foci. A first-in-human
study with [89Zr]Zr-oxine-leukocytes in four healthy volunteers was reported in
2022. Our first-in-human study utilising the cell surface labelling approach
aimed to image infection in patients with the use of 89Zr-labelled leukocytes,
using p-isothiocyanatobenzyl-desferrioxamine B (Df-Bz-NCS) as a bifunctional
chelating agent, and to compare the scan quality and biodistribution of [89Zr]ZrDf-Bz-NCS-labelled leukocytes on PET images to SPECT images obtained with
[
99mTc]Tc-HMPAO-labelled leukocytes.
METHODS: Leukocytes were isolated from whole-blood samples of eight patients
with clinically and/or radiologically confirmed infection. Isolated leukocytes were
labelled with [99mTc]Tc-HMPAO according to standardised methods, and [89Zr]ZrDf-Bz-NCS according to our previously published radiolabelling method.Whole-body SPECT imaging was performed 2 and 18 h post injection of [99mTc]TcHMPAO-labelled leukocytes, and whole-body PET/CT was performed 3 and 24 h
post injection of [89Zr]Zr-Df-Bz-NCS-labelled leukocytes in seven patients.
RESULTS: Successful [89Zr]Zr-Df-Bz-NCS-leukocyte labelling was achieved. High
labelling efficiencies were obtained (81.7% ± 3.6%; n = 8). A mean high viability of
[
89Zr]Zr-Df-Bz-NCS-labelled leukocytes was observed (88.98% ± 12.51%). The
[
89Zr]Zr-Df-Bz-NCS-leukocyte labelling efficiency was not significantly affected by
the white blood cell count of the patient. The performance of [99mTc]Tc-HMPAOand [89Zr]Zr-Df-Bz-NCS-labelled leukocytes, in terms of the ability to accurately
detect infection, were similar in two out of seven patients, and [99mTc]Tc-HMPAOlabelled leukocytes outperformed [89Zr]Zr-Df-Bz-NCS-labelled leukocytes in one
patient with femoral osteomyelitis. However, in two cases of pulmonary pathology,
[
89Zr]Zr-Df-Bz-NCS-labelled leukocytes demonstrated improved pathological
uptake. No skeletal activity was observed in any of the patients imaged with [89Zr]
Zr-Df-Bz-NCS-labelled leukocytes, illustrating the in vivo stability of the radiolabel.
DISCUSSION: Although the [89Zr]Zr-Df-Bz-NCS-leukocyte labelling aspect of this
study was noteworthy, infection imaging did not yield convincingly positive
results due to the pulmonary trapping of intravenously administered [89Zr]Zr-DfBz-NCS-labelled leukocytes.