3 research outputs found

    New synthesis route of active substance d,l-HMPAO for preparation Technetium Tc99m Exametazime

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    BACKGROUND: Technetium Tc99m Exametazime (99mTc-HMPAO) is currently used as a radiopharmaceutical for determining regional cerebral blood flow and for the labelling of autologous leucocytes for infection and inflammation imaging. The HMPAO ligand exists in two diastereomeric forms: d,l and meso. Usually, the substance is obtained in low chemical yield in a time consuming procedure. Furthermore, the final product still contains some amounts of the meso-form. The aim of this study was to develop the efficient, reliable and fast method for isolation of the d,l-HMPAO, which would provide the ligand with high purity and free from the meso-diastereomer. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The mixture of the meso- and d,l-HMPAO was synthesized in two-steps by condensation of propanediamine with keto-oxime and the reduction of the obtained bisimine. The d- and l-enantiomers were separated individually directly from this mixture by repeated crystallizations from ethanol as their tartrate salts and pooled together in equal proportions. That substance was characterized for its identity and isomeric purity using IR, HPLC and GC methods. The meso-free d,l-HMPAO was used for the preparation of the radiopharmaceutical freeze-dried kit for technetium-99m radiolabelling. Quality assessment of obtained 99mTc-d,l-HMPAO complex was performed according to the current Ph.Eur. monograph 1925 and USP monograph — Technetium Tc99m Exametazime Injection. To verify its biological activity, the kit-prepared 99mTc-d,l-HMPAO has been used for the white blood cell (WBC) labelling. RESULTS: According to the proposed synthesis route the d,l-HMPAO was obtained with around 18–20% yield in the total time of 10 days. The ligand identity was confirmed and the HPLC analysis revealed more than 99% chemical purity. The undesired meso-form was not detected. Freeze dried kit formulation for 99mTc-labelling of d,l-HMPAO has been established and four batches of kits were manufactured. The radiochemical purity of 99mTc-d,l-HMPAO complex was high (> 95% of lipophilic technetium-99m exametazime). Brain uptake in rats reached 2.1 ± 0.3%. The in vitro labelling of WBC resulted in 68.3 ± 6.6% yield. CONCLUSION: A new synthesis method of d,l-HMPAO, drug substance for technetium-99m exametazime preparation has been developed

    Sex-Dependent Differences in Predictive Value of the C2HEST Score in Subjects with COVID-19—A Secondary Analysis of the COLOS Study

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    Background: Since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, a growing number of evidence suggests that COVID-19 presents sex-dependent differences in clinical course and outcomes. Nevertheless, there is still an unmet need to stratify the risk for poor outcome at the beginning of hospitalization. Since individual C2HEST components are similar COVID-19 mortality risk factors, we evaluated sex-related predictive value of the score. Material and Methods: A total of 2183 medical records of consecutive patients hospitalized due to confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infections were analyzed. Subjects were assigned to one of two of the study arms (male vs. female) and afterward allocated to different stratum based on the C2HEST score result. The measured outcomes included: in-hospital-mortality, three-month- and six-month-all-cause-mortality and in-hospital non-fatal adverse clinical events. Results: The C2HEST score predicted the mortality with better sensitivity in female population regarding the short- and mid-term. Among secondary outcomes, C2HEST-score revealed predictive value in both genders for pneumonia, myocardial injury, myocardial infarction, acute heart failure, cardiogenic shock, and acute kidney injury. Additionally in the male cohort, the C2HEST value predicted acute liver dysfunction and all-cause bleeding, whereas in the female arm-stroke/TIA and SIRS. Conclusion: In the present study, we demonstrated the better C2HEST-score predictive value for mortality in women and illustrated sex-dependent differences predicting non-fatal secondary outcomes
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