Crump Institute for Molecular Imaging and Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology, David Geffen School of Medicine , University of California Los Angeles , Los Angeles , California 90095 , United States.
Physics & Biology in Medicine Interdepartmental Graduate Program, David Geffen School of Medicine , University of California Los Angeles , Los Angeles , California 90095 , United States.
Anal Chem. 2020 Feb 18;92(4):3483-3491. doi: 10.1021/acs.analchem.9b04827. Epub 2020 Feb 7.
For decades, there has been immense progress in miniaturizing analytical methods based on electrophoresis to improve sensitivity and to reduce sample volumes, separation times, and/or equipment cost and space requirements, in applications ranging from analysis of biological samples to environmental analysis to forensics. In the field of radiochemistry, where radiation-shielded laboratory space is limited, there has been great interest in harnessing the compactness, high efficiency, and speed of microfluidics to synthesize short-lived radiolabeled compounds. We recently proposed that analysis of these compounds could also benefit from miniaturization and have been investigating capillary electrophoresis (CE) and hybrid microchip electrophoresis (hybrid-MCE) as alternatives to the typically used high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). We previously showed separation of the positron-emission tomography (PET) imaging tracer 3'-deoxy-3'-fluorothymidine (FLT) from its impurities in a hybrid-MCE device with UV detection, with similar separation performance to HPLC, but with improved speed and lower sample volumes. In this paper, we have developed an integrated radiation detector to enable measurement of the emitted radiation from radiolabeled compounds. Though conventional radiation detectors have been incorporated into CE systems in the past, these approaches cannot be readily integrated into a compact hybrid-MCE device. We instead employed a solid-state avalanche photodiode (APD)-based detector for real-time, high-sensitivity β particle detection. The integrated system can reliably separate [F]FLT from its impurities and perform chemical identification via coinjection with nonradioactive reference standard. This system can quantitate samples with radioactivity concentrations as low as 114 MBq/mL (3.1 mCi/mL), which is sufficient for analysis of radiochemical purity of radiopharmaceuticals.
几十年来,基于电泳的分析方法在微型化方面取得了巨大进展,以提高灵敏度并减少样品量、分离时间和/或设备成本和空间要求,应用范围从生物样品分析到环境分析到法医学。在放射化学领域,由于辐射屏蔽的实验室空间有限,人们对利用微流控的紧凑性、高效率和速度来合成短寿命放射性标记化合物非常感兴趣。我们最近提出,这些化合物的分析也可以受益于微型化,并一直在研究毛细管电泳(CE)和混合微芯片电泳(hybrid-MCE)作为通常使用的高效液相色谱(HPLC)的替代方法。我们之前曾展示过,在带有紫外检测的混合微芯片电泳装置中,可以将正电子发射断层扫描(PET)成像示踪剂 3'-脱氧-3'-氟胸苷(FLT)与其杂质分离,其分离性能与 HPLC 相似,但速度更快,样品量更少。在本文中,我们开发了一种集成辐射探测器,以实现对放射性标记化合物发射辐射的测量。尽管过去已经将传统的辐射探测器集成到 CE 系统中,但这些方法不能轻易集成到紧凑的混合微芯片电泳装置中。相反,我们使用基于固态雪崩光电二极管(APD)的探测器进行实时、高灵敏度β粒子检测。该集成系统能够可靠地分离[F]FLT 与其杂质,并通过与非放射性参比标准的共注射进行化学鉴定。该系统可以定量分析放射性浓度低至 114 MBq/mL(3.1 mCi/mL)的样品,足以分析放射性药物的放射化学纯度。