Researchers have developed a new contrast agent that works with both PET and MRI, according to a recent study published in Angewandte Chemie International Edition.
Researchers at Werner Siemens Imaging Center in Tübingen, Germany, collaborated with the Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry of the Czech Academy of Sciences (IOCB Prague) to demonstrate the diagnostic capabilities of so-called F-18 [Gd (FL1)] PET/MRI in a pilot study on healthy mice. The approach successfully detected early cases of unilateral renal dysfunction, a condition that is typically challenging to diagnose.
"Our solution is a cleverly designed molecule that combines gadolinium and radioactive fluorine-18, which is commonly used in medical scans and is easy to obtain," said lead author Jan Kretschmer, PhD, in a news release.
Hybrid PET/MRI combines the quantitative power and sensitivity of PET with the high functional and anatomical detail of MRI, yet the development of dual PET/MRI probes has been hampered by challenging synthesis and radiolabeling, the researchers noted.
The full study was published on 26 July and is available here.