Developing ether and alcohol based extraction chromatography resins for purification of antimony-119 in nuclear medicine
Aivija Grundmane, Illarion Dovhyi, Lauren Aburto-Kung, Steffen Happel, Caterina F Ramogida, Valery Radchenko

TL;DR
Researchers developed new resins to purify antimony-119 from tin, a key step in nuclear medicine for producing radiopharmaceuticals.
Contribution
The study introduces novel ether and alcohol-based resins for efficient antimony-119 purification from tin targets.
Findings
Seven out of eight resins showed excellent antimony retention capacity.
DBE-300 resin allows near-quantitative recovery of 119Sb in ethanol.
Resins offer compatibility with recycling enriched tin material.
Abstract
Antimony-119 (119Sb, t1/2 = 38.19 h) is an Auger electron emitting radionuclide of interest for radiopharmaceutical therapy. It can be directly produced by proton bombardment of tin-119 using low energy cyclotrons. The radiochemical separation methods available for recovering 119Sb from the bulk Sn target material are lacking, particularly with respect to matrix suitability for further applications. Eight new resins were successfully synthesized, evaluating combinations of two different resin support materials with three different chain lengths of ethers (dibutyl, dipentyl, dioctyl) as well as fluorinated alcohol as the impregnated extractant. All resins showed good stability, losing less than 1% of functional groups in HCl and water. Seven out of eight synthesized resins showed excellent capacity, retaining tens to hundreds of milligrams of Sb per gram of resin. Seven out of eight…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadiopharmaceutical Chemistry and Applications · Medical Imaging Techniques and Applications · Orthopaedic implants and arthroplasty
