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Nephrotoxicity in mice after repeated imaging using 111In-labeled peptides.

J Nucl Med · 2010

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study on mice, repeated imaging with a specific radioactive peptide ((111)In-DTPA-exendin-4) delivered a very high radiation dose to the kidneys—70 Gy in normal mice and 20-40 Gy in mice lacking a protein called megalin. This high dose led to kidney damage, as shown by changes in kidney function and tissue changes seen under a microscope. Other similar peptides caused much lower radiation doses to the kidneys.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Nucl Med, 2010
Citations25
Relative citation ratio0.83
NIH percentile44
Molecules
Conditions studied Chronic Kidney Disease

Abstract

UNLABELLED: We determined the renal radiation dose of a series of (111)In-labeled peptides using animal SPECT. Because the animals' health deteriorated, renal toxicity was assessed. METHODS: Wild-type and megalin-deficient mice were imaged repeatedly at 3- to 6-wk intervals to quantify renal retention after injection of 40-50 MBq of (111)In-diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid-labeled peptides (octreotide, exendin, octreotate, neurotensin, and minigastrin analogs), and the absorbed kidney radiation doses were estimated. Body weight, renal function parameters, and renal histology were determined at 16-20 wk after the first scan and compared with those in naive animals. RESULTS: Because of high renal retention, (111)In-diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid-exendin-4 scans resulted in a 70-Gy kidney radiation dose in wild-type mice. Megalin-deficient kidneys received 20-40 Gy. The other peptides resulted in much lower renal doses. Kidney function monitoring indicated renal damage in imaged animals. CONCLUSION: Micro-SPECT enables longitudinal studies in 1 animal. However, long-term nephrotoxic effects may be induced after high renal radiation doses, even with (111)In-labeled radiotracers.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 20484435 ↗