Rubidium-82

Overview

Rubidium-82(82Rb) is a radioactive isotope of Rubidium. 82Rb is widely used in Myocardial perfusion imaging. This isotope undergoes rapid uptake by myocardiocytes, which makes it a valuable tool for identifying myocardial ischemia in PET imaging. 82Rb is used in the pharmaceutical industry and is marketed under the trade name CardioGen-82(Bracco Diagnostics, Inc.).

This image depicts a vile of CardioGen-82; The injectable form of Rb-82. Also shown is the Rb-82 generator.
Physical Data
IUPAC: Rubidium-82
Molar Mass: 81.9182098 g/mol
Melting Point: 39.48 °C
Boiling Point: 688 °C
Density: 1.53 g•cm−3

History

Discovery and Early Uses - In 1953 it was discovered by W.D. Love et al. that Rubidium carried a biological activity that was comparable to potassium.In 1959, preclinical trials showed in dogs, that myocardial uptake of this radionuclide was directly proportional to myocardial blood flow. In 1979, Yano et al. compared several ion-exchange columns to be used in an automated82Sr/82Rb generator for clinical testing. Around 1980, pre-clinical trials began using 82Rb in Positron Emission Tomography. In 1982, Selwyn et al. examined the relation between myocardial perfusion and rubidium-82 uptake during acute ischemia in six dogs after coronary stenosis and in five volunteers and five patients with coronary artery disease. Myocardial tomograms, recorded at rest and after exercise in the volunteers showed homogeneous uptake in reproducible and repeatable scans. Rubidium-82 isotope has shown considerable accuracy comparable to that of 99mTc-SPECT. In 1989, the FDA approved Bracco Diagnostics, Inc. produced 82Rb/82Sr generator in the U.S. for commercial use.[1] With increased 82Sr production capabilities the use of 82Rb has increased over the last 10 years.

Nuclear Properties

Symbol Protons Neutrons Isotopic Mass Half-Life Decay Mode Parent Isotope Daughter Isotope Nuclear Spin
82Rb 37 45 81.918 g/mol 1.273 min β+ 82Sr 82Kr +1
This figure depicts the decay of Rubidium-82, which undergoes Positron emission.

Production

The production of Rubidium-82 comes from the parent nucleus, Strontium-82.The 82Sr/82Rb generator is named CardioGen-82. The generator contains accelerator produced 82Sr adsorbed on stannic oxide in a lead-shielded column and provides a means for obtaining sterile nonpyrogenic solutions of RbCl(Halide salt form capable of injection). The amount (millicuries) of Rb-82 obtained in each elution will depend on the potency of the generator. When eluted at a rate of 50 mL/minute, each generator eluate at the end of elution should not contain more than 0.02 microcurie of strontium Sr-82 and not more than 0.2 microcurie of strontium Sr-85 per millicurie of rubidium chloride Rb 82 injection, and not more than 1 microgram of tin per mL of eluate.[2]

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action: 82Rb has activity very similar to that of a potassium ion(K+). Once in the myocardium, it is an active participant in the sodium-potassium exchange pump of cells. It is rapidly extracted by the myocardium proportional to blood flow. Its radioactivity is increased in viable myocardial cells reflecting cellular retention, while the tracer is cleared rapidly from necrotic or infarcted tissue.[2]

Pharmacodynamics: When tested clinically, 82Rb is seen in the myocardium within the first minute of intravenous injection. When the myocardium is affected with ischemia or infarction, they will be visualized between 2–7 minutes. These affected areas will be shown as photon deficient on the PET scan. 82Rb passes through the entire body on the first pass of circulation and has visible uptake in organs such as the kidney, liver, spleen and lung. This is due to the high vascularity of those organs.[2]

Use in Positron Emission Tomography(PET)

Rubidium is rapidly extracted from the blood and is taken up by the myocardium in relation to myocardial perfusion, which requires energy for myocardial uptake through Na+/K+-ATPase similar to thallium-201. 82Rb is capable of producing a clear perfusion image similar to single photon emission computed tomography(SPECT)-MPI because it is an extractable tracer. The short half-life requires rapid image acquisition shortly after tracer administration, which reduces total study time.[3] The short half-life also allows for less radiation experienced by the patient. A standard visual perfusion imaging assessment is based on defining regional uptake relative to the maximum uptake in the myocardium. Importantly, 82Rb PET also seems to provide prognostic value in patients who are obese and whose diagnosis remains uncertain after SPECT-MPI.

82Rb myocardial blood flow quantification is expected to improve the detection of multivessel coronary heart disease.[3] 82Rb/PET is a valuable tool in ischemia identification. Myocardial Ischemia is an inadequate blood supply to the heart. 82Rb/PET can be used to quantify the myocardial flow reserve in the ventricles which then allows the medical professional to make an accurate diagnosis and prognosis of the patient. Various vasoreactivity studies are made possible through 82Rb/PET imaging due to its quantification of myocardial blood flow. It is possible to quantify stress in patients under the same reasoning.[4] Recently it has been shown that nueroendocrine tumor metastasis can be imaged with82Rb due to its ability to quantify myocardial blood flow (MBF) during rest and pharmacological stress, commonly performed with adenosine.[5]

Advantages

[6] A 56-year-old woman with a history of obesity (BMI: 31.2 cm/kg2), hypertension, hyperlipemia, and type 2 diabetes complicated of retinopathy and renal failure.

One of the main advantages of 82Rb is its availability in nuclear medicine departments. This isotope is daily available after elution of a 82Sr column which takes 10 minutes; This makes it possible to produce enough samples to inject about 10-15 patients a day.[1] Another advantage of 82Rb would be its high count density in myocardial tissue. 82Rb/PET has shown greater uniformity and count density than Tc99m-SPECT when examining the myocardium. This results in higher interpretive confidence and greater accuracy. It allows for quantification of coronary flow reserve and myocardial blood flow. 82Rb also has an advantage in that it has a very short half-life which results in much lower radiation exposure for the patient. This is especially important as the use of myocardial imaging increases in the medical field. When it comes to patients, 82Rb is beneficial to use when the patient is obese or physically unable to perform a stress test. It also has side effects limited to minor irritation around the injection site.[7]

Limitations

A serious limitation of 82Rb would be its cost. Currently 99mTc costs on average $70 per dose, needing two doses; whereas 82Rb costs about $250 a dose. Another limitation of this isotope is that it needs a dedicated PET/CT camera, and in places like Europe where a 82Sr/82Rb generator is still yet to be approved that can be hard to find.[1]

See also

1. Sampson UK, Dorbala S, Limaye A, Kwong R, Di Carli MF. Diagnostic Accuracy of Rubidium-82 Myocardial Perfusion Imaging With Hybrid Positron Emission

2. Efseaff M, Klein R, Ziadi MC, Beanlands RS, deKemp RA. Short-term repeatability of resting myocardial blood flow measurements using rubidium-82 PET imaging. Journal of Nuclear Cardiology. 2012;19:997-1006.

3. Mc Ardle BA, Dowsley TF, Dekemp RA, Wells GA, Beanlands RS. Does rubidium-82 PET have superior accuracy to SPECT perfusion imaging for the diagnosis of obstructive coronary disease?: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 2012;60:1828-1837.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Chatal JF, Rouzet F, Haddad F, Bourdeau C, Mathieu C, Le Guludec D (2015). "Story of rubidium-82 and advantages for myocardial perfusion PET imaging.". Front. Med.2:65. doi:10.3389/fmed.2015.00065.
  2. 1 2 3 Bracco Diagnostics, Inc. (2000). "CardioGen-82" (PDF). Medi-Physics. Retrieved 27 March 2016.
  3. 1 2 Keiichiro Yoshinaga (MD, FJCC) a,∗ , Ran Klein (MASc) b,c , Nagara Tamaki (MD, FJCC) (2009). "Generator-produced rubidium-82 positron emission tomography myocardial perfusion imaging—From basic aspects to clinical applications.". Journal of Cardiology 55:2. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  4. Ziadi MC; deKemp RA; Williams KA; et al. (2011). "Impaired Myocardial Flow Reserve on Rubidium-82 Positron Emission Tomography Imaging Predicts Adverse Outcomes in Patients Assessed for Myocardial Ischemia.". Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 2011;58:740-748.
  5. Hasbak P, Enevoldsen LH, Fosbøl M, Skovgaard D, Knigge UP, Kjær A (2015). "Rubidium-82 uptake in metastases from neuroendocrine tumors: No flow response to adenosine.". Journal of Nuclear Cardiology.
  6. Chatal JF, Rouzet F, Haddad F, Bourdeau C, Mathieu C, Le Guludec D (2015). "Story of rubidium-82 and advantages for myocardial perfusion PET imaging". Front. Med.2:65. doi:10.3389/fmed.2015.00065.
  7. Sampson UK, Dorbala S, Limaye A, Kwong R, Di Carli MF (2007). "Diagnostic Accuracy of Rubidium-82 Myocardial Perfusion Imaging With Hybrid Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography in the Detection of Coronary Artery Disease.". Journal of the American College of Cardiology 49.
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