2017-450 MICROSCALE DEVICE AND METHOD FOR PURIFICATION OF RADIOPHARMACEUTICALS

Microscale Device and Method for Purification of Radiopharmaceuticals

Tech ID: 30310 / UC Case 2017-450-0

 

SUMMARY

UCLA researchers from the Departments of Molecular & Medical Pharmacology and Bioengineering have developed a novel method for the purification of radiopharmaceuticals for the on-demand production of positron emission tomography (PET) tracers.

 

BACKGROUND

Positron emission tomography (PET) is a real-time, in vivo 3D imaging technique that has unparalleled specificity and sensitivity for visualizing biochemical processes. Though several tracers have been advanced to the clinic, the development and translation of others is hindered by the limited availability and high production cost of these short-lived compounds. Microfluidic radiochemistry can remove this bottleneck, enabling low-cost PET tracer production on demand. While significant enhancements of microfluidic tools for many parts of the PET tracer production process has occurred in the last few years, there has been relatively little development of improving the process of microscale purification.

 

INNOVATION

UCLA researchers have developed a novel device and method for the purification of radiopharmaceuticals. This device is designed around a method called capillary electrophoresis (CE) that relies on an electric field to drive a sample through a capillary or a microchannel and perform separation. The novel CE method is able to accommodate the larger sample volumes required for purification processes, as opposed to the typical 5-50 nanoliter volumes in traditional analytical CE which is 20-200x too small. In addition, integration into a microfluidic device critically links the radiation detection to fraction collection which allows purification of the desired product peak from the overall crude reaction mixture.

 

APPLICATIONS

Purification of PET tracers

Purification of radiopharmaceuticals

 

ADVANTAGES

Microliter volume purification using capillary electrophoresis

Can directly purify radioactive product from crude mixture

Allows for on-demand production of PET tracers and radiopharmaceuticals

Lowers size, cost, and complexity of radiopharmaceutical production equipment

Speeds up radiopharmaceutical production

 

PATENT STATUS

Patent Pending

Patent Information:
For More Information:
Earl Weinstein
Associate Director of Business Development
eweinstein@tdg.ucla.edu
Inventors:
R. Michael Van Dam
Seunghyun Noel Ha
Jason Jones
Jimmy Ly
Stephen Liu
Shilin Cheung