Summary
UCLA researchers have developed a platform to perform fluoride ion concentration, solvent exchange, and activation on a continuous flow microfluidic chip. This invention is applicable to Fluorine-18 radiochemistry as well as widely applicable to any flow through capillary platforms or microfluidic platforms, which involve solvent exchange processes, specifically in multistep organic synthesis.
Background
Fluorine-18 (18F-) is an important isotope in radiotracer synthesis for positron emission tomography (PET). Fluorine-18 possesses many desirable properties such as a strong and stable C-F bond, relatively low energy, and a half-life that provides sufficient time for local shipping. Radiosynthesis of the majority of PET probes involves the concentration of the F18-fluoride ion, followed by several cycles of azeotropic distillation to remove all the water. The dried and activated 18F is then transferred to the microfluidic or capillary microreactor for subsequent fluorination steps. These steps have traditionally mandated a scale of production that is much greater than the required amount of isotope, leading to severe limitations in cost, speed of production and reaction efficiency. The inefficient production of the radioisotope is a restriction on further research and clinical study of new radiolabeled compounds. Novel approaches that can efficiently downscale the preparation and synthesis of PET probes have enormous potential in improving research and access to PET imaging.
Innovation
Dr. Keng and colleagues in UCLA's Department of Molecular & Medical Pharmacology have developed a system that uses functional polymer monoliths on a flow-through microfluidic platform to perform ion concentration, solvent exchange and activation processes within a single chip with high efficiency. The polymer monolith dually concentrates and activates the [18F] fluoride ion on the microfluidic chip thereby circumventing additional drying steps. The unique polymer monolith is highly suitable for microfluidic applications due to the ease of preparation, high loading capacity, high surface area, tunable pore size, tunable functionalities and high hydrodynamic flow. The researchers have confirmed that the anion exchange monoliths polymerized within the 13 μL serpentine channels of microfluidic chip consisted sufficient surface area to trap [18F]fluoride ion up to 1 Ci in radioactivity. Additionally, they have successfully prepared and demonstrate the fluoride trapping and activation in other micro-volume chambers. The Keng group has successfully demonstrated comparable fluorination efficiencies of several commonly used PET probe intermediates. Thus, this method and apparatus provides a practical and efficient interface for concentrating, drying, and activation non-carrier added 18F-fluoride directly from the cyclotron into the tens to hundreds of microliters volume. This technology platform can also be adapted for conventional macroscale radiosynthesizer to eliminate the time consuming drying processes.
Applications
Advantages
Polymer monolith is uniquely suitable for microfluidic application due to:
State Of Development
The researchers have performed numerous proof-of-concept experiments, which showed that the polymer monolith platform described here could be applicable in F18 radiosynthesis and could be applicable for multistep chemical synthesis on a flow through microfluidic devices. Studies are also being conducted to further optimize the structure and properties of the polymer monolith. Further investigations on using different type of phase transfer catalyst, solvents, and co-solvents to expand the flexibility of the synthetic scope are currently in progress.