Abstract
Positron emission tomography (PET) is an important non-invasive tool to help guide the drug discovery and development process. Positron-emitting-radiolabeled drug candidates represent an important tool for drug hunters to gain insight into a drug's biodistribution and target engagement of exploratory biologic targets of interest. Recently, there have been several drug candidates that incorporate an acryloyl functional group due to their ability to form a covalent bond within the biological target of interest through Michael addition. Methods to incorporate a carbon-11 radionuclide into acrylamide derivatives remain challenging given the reactive nature of this moiety. Herein, we report the improved radiosynthesis of carbon-11-containing acrylamide drug candidates, [(11)C]ibrutinib, [(11)C]tolebrutinib, and [(11)C]evobrutinib, using [(11)C]CO and a novel "in-loop" (11) C-carbonylation reaction. [(11)C]Ibrutinib, [(11)C]tolebrutinib, and [(11)C]evobrutinib were reliably synthesized, generating 2.2-7.1 GBq of these radiopharmaceuticals in radiochemical yields ranging from 3.3 to 12.8% (non-decay corrected; relative to starting [(11)C]CO(2)) and molar activities of 281-500 GBq/μmol (7.5-13.5 Ci/μmol), respectively. This study highlights an improved method for incorporating carbon-11 into acrylamide drug candidates using [(11)C]CO within an HPLC loop suitable for clinical translation using simple modifications of standard automated synthesis modules used for cGMP manufacture of PET radioligands.