Luca Menichetti
National Research Council
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Publication
Featured researches published by Luca Menichetti.
Critical Reviews in Oncology Hematology | 2008
Andrea Wittig; Jean Michel; Raymond L. Moss; Finn Stecher-Rasmussen; Heinrich F. Arlinghaus; Peter Bendel; Pier Luigi Mauri; S. Altieri; Ralf A. Hilger; Piero A. Salvadori; Luca Menichetti; Robert Zamenhof; Wolfgang Sauerwein
Boron Neutron Capture Therapy (BNCT) is based on the ability of the stable isotope 10B to capture neutrons, which leads to a nuclear reaction producing an alpha- and a 7Li-particle, both having a high biological effectiveness and a very short range in tissue, being limited to approximately one cell diameter. This opens the possibility for a highly selective cancer therapy. BNCT strongly depends on the selective uptake of 10B in tumor cells and on its distribution inside the cells. The chemical properties of boron and the need to discriminate different isotopes make the investigation of the concentration and distribution of 10B a challenging task. The most advanced techniques to measure and image boron are described, both invasive and non-invasive. The most promising approach for further investigation will be the complementary use of the different techniques to obtain the information that is mandatory for the future of this innovative treatment modality.
Contrast Media & Molecular Imaging | 2012
Luca Menichetti; Francesca Frijia; Alessandra Flori; Florian Wiesinger; Vincenzo Lionetti; Giulio Giovannetti; Giovanni Donato Aquaro; Fabio A. Recchia; Jan Henrik Ardenkjaer-Larsen; Maria Filomena Santarelli; Massimo Lombardi
Hyperpolarization of ¹³C-labeled energy substrates enables the noninvasive detection and mapping of metabolic activity, in vivo, with magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). Therefore, hyperpolarization and ¹³C MRS can potentially become a powerful tool to study the physiology of organs such as the heart, through the quantification of kinetic patterns under both normal and pathological conditions. In this study we assessed myocardial uptake and metabolism of hyperpolarized [1-¹³C]pyruvate in anesthetized pigs. Pyruvate metabolism was studied at baseline and during dobutamine-induced stimulation. We applied a numerical approach for spectral analysis and kinetic fitting (LSFIT/KIMOfit), making a comparison with a well-known jMRUI/AMARES analysis and γ-variate function, and we estimated the apparent conversion rate of hyperpolarized [1-¹³C]pyruvate into its downstream metabolites [1-¹³C]lactate, [1-¹³C]alanine and [¹³C]bicarbonate in a 3 T MR scanner. We detected an increase in the apparent kinetic constants (k(PX) ) for bicarbonate and lactate of two-fold during dobutamine infusion. These data correlate with the double product (rate-pressure product), an indirect parameter of cardiac oxygen consumption: we observed an increase in value by 46 ± 11% during inotropic stress. The proposed approach might be applied to future studies in models of cardiac disease and/or for the assessment of the pharmacokinetic properties of suitable ¹³C-enriched tracers for MRS.
Applied Radiation and Isotopes | 2011
Luca Menichetti; D De Marchi; Lucia Calucci; Gianni Ciofani; Arianna Menciassi; Claudia Forte
The applicability of boron nitride nanotubes (BNNTs) containing Fe paramagnetic impurities as contrast agents in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was investigated. The measurement of longitudinal and transverse relaxation times of water protons in homogeneous aqueous dispersions of BNNTs wrapped with poly(L-lysine) at different concentrations allowed longitudinal (r(1)) and transverse (r(2)) relaxivities to be determined at 3T. The r(2) value was comparable to those of commercial superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles, indicating that Fe-containing BNNTs have the potential to be used as T(2) contrast-enhancement agents in MRI at 3T.
Contrast Media & Molecular Imaging | 2015
Alessandra Flori; Matteo Liserani; Francesca Frijia; Giulio Giovannetti; Vincenzo Lionetti; Valentina Casieri; Vincenzo Positano; Giovanni Donato Aquaro; Fabio A. Recchia; Maria Filomena Santarelli; Luigi Landini; Jan Henrik Ardenkjaer-Larsen; Luca Menichetti
Dissolution-dynamic nuclear polarization (dissolution-DNP) for magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopic imaging has recently emerged as a novel technique for noninvasive studies of the metabolic fate of biomolecules in vivo. Since acetate is the most abundant extra- and intracellular short-chain fatty acid, we focused on [1-(13) C]acetate as a promising candidate for a chemical probe to study the myocardial metabolism of a beating heart. The dissolution-DNP procedure of Na[1-(13) C]acetate for in vivo cardiac applications with a 3 T MR scanner was optimized in pigs during bolus injection of doses of up to 3 mmol. The Na[1-(13) C]acetate formulation was characterized by a liquid-state polarization of 14.2% and a T1Eff in vivo of 17.6 ± 1.7 s. In vivo Na[1-(13) C]acetate kinetics displayed a bimodal shape: [1-(13) C]acetyl carnitine (AcC) was detected in a slice covering the cardiac volume, and the signal of (13) C-acetate and (13) C-AcC was modeled using the total area under the curve (AUC) for kinetic analysis. A good correlation was found between the ratio AUC(AcC)/AUC(acetate) and the apparent kinetic constant of metabolic conversion, from [1-(13) C]acetate to [1-(13) C]AcC (kAcC ), divided by the AcC longitudinal relaxation rate (r1 ). Our study proved the feasibility and the limitations of administration of large doses of hyperpolarized [1-(13) C]acetate to study the myocardial conversion of [1-(13) C]acetate in [1-(13) C]acetyl-carnitine generated by acetyltransferase in healthy pigs.
Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2015
Cinzia Avigo; Nicole Di Lascio; Paolo Armanetti; Claudia Kusmic; Lucia Cavigli; Fulvio Ratto; Sandro Meucci; Cecilia Masciullo; Marco Cecchini; Roberto Pini; Francesco Faita; Luca Menichetti
Abstract. Photoacoustic imaging is an emerging technique. Although commercially available photoacoustic imaging systems currently exist, the technology is still in its infancy. Therefore, the design of stable phantoms is essential to achieve semiquantitative evaluation of the performance of a photoacoustic system and can help optimize the properties of contrast agents. We designed and developed a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) phantom with exceptionally fine geometry; the phantom was tested using photoacoustic experiments loaded with the standard indocyanine green dye and compared to an agar phantom pattern through polyethylene glycol-gold nanorods. The linearity of the photoacoustic signal with the nanoparticle number was assessed. The signal-to-noise ratio and contrast were employed as image quality parameters, and enhancements of up to 50 and up to 300%, respectively, were measured with the PDMS phantom with respect to the agar one. A tissue-mimicking (TM)-PDMS was prepared by adding TiO2 and India ink; photoacoustic tests were performed in order to compare the signal generated by the TM-PDMS and the biological tissue. The PDMS phantom can become a particularly promising tool in the field of photoacoustics for the evaluation of the performance of a PA system and as a model of the structure of vascularized soft tissues.
NMR in Biomedicine | 2012
Maria Filomena Santarelli; Vincenzo Positano; Giulio Giovannetti; Francesca Frijia; Luca Menichetti; Jan-Henrik Ardenkjaer-Larsen; Daniele De Marchi; Vincenzo Lionetti; Giovanni Donato Aquaro; Massimo Lombardi; Luigi Landini
MRS of hyperpolarized 13C‐labeled compounds represents a promising technique for in vivo metabolic studies. However, robust quantification and metabolic modeling are still important areas of investigation. In particular, time and spatial resolution constraints may lead to the analysis of MRS signals with low signal‐to‐noise ratio (SNR). The relationship between SNR and the precision of quantitative analysis for the evaluation of the in vivo kinetic behavior of metabolites is unknown. In this article, this topic is addressed by Monte Carlo simulations, covering the problem of MRS signal model parameter estimation, with strong emphasis on the peak amplitude and kinetic model parameters. The results of Monte Carlo simulation were confirmed by in vivo experiments on medium‐sized animals injected with hyperpolarized [1‐13C]pyruvate. The results of this study may be useful for the establishment of experimental planning and for the optimization of kinetic model estimation as a function of the SNR value. Copyright
Applied Radiation and Isotopes | 2009
Luca Menichetti; L. Cionini; Wolfgang Sauerwein; S. Altieri; Olof Solin; H. Minn; Pa Salvadori
Positron emission tomography (PET) has become a key imaging tool in clinical practice and biomedical research to quantify and study biochemical processes in vivo. Physiologically active compounds are tagged with positron emitters (e.g. (18)F, (11)C, (124)I) while maintaining their biological properties, and are administered intravenously in tracer amounts (10(-9)-10(-12)M quantities). The recent physical integration of PET and computed tomography (CT) in hybrid PET/CT scanners allows a combined anatomical and functional imaging: nowadays PET molecular imaging is emerging as powerful pharmacological tool in oncology, neurology and for treatment planning as guidance for radiation therapy. The in vivo pharmacokinetics of boron carrier for BNCT and the quantification of (10)B in living tissue were performed by PET in the late nineties using compartmental models based on PET data. Nowadays PET and PET/CT have been used to address the issue of pharmacokinetic, metabolism and accumulation of BPA in target tissue. The added value of the use of L-[(18)F]FBPA and PET/CT in BNCT is to provide key data on the tumour extraction of (10)B-BPA versus normal tissue and to predict the efficacy of the treatment based on a single-study patient analysis. Due to the complexity of a binary treatment like BNCT, the role of PET/CT is currently to design new criteria for patient enrolment in treatment protocols: the L-[(18)F]BPA/PET methodology could be considered as an important tool in newly designed clinical trials to better estimate the concentration ratio of BPA in the tumour as compared to neighbouring normal tissues. Based on these values for individual patients the decision could be made whether BNCT treatment could be advantageous due to a selective accumulation of BPA in an individual tumour. This approach, applicable in different tumour entities like melanoma, glioblastoma and head and neck malignancies, make this methodology as reliable prognostic and therapeutic indicator for patient undergoing BNCT.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2015
Alessandra Flori; Matteo Liserani; Sean Bowen; Jan Henrik Ardenkjaer-Larsen; Luca Menichetti
The intrinsic physicochemical properties of the sample formulation are the key factors for efficient hyperpolarization through dissolution dynamic nuclear polarization (dissolution-DNP). We provide a comprehensive characterization of the DNP process for Na-[1-(13)C]acetate selected as a model for non-self-glassing agents: the solid-state polarization dynamics of different formulations and the effect of the paramagnetic agent (trityl radical) on the pattern of polarization and the relaxation profile were extensively analyzed. We quantified the effects of the glassing agent and Gd(3+)-chelate on DNP performance. The results reported here describe the constraints of the acetate formulation useful for future studies in this field with non-self-glassing enriched molecules.
World Journal of Radiology | 2013
Fernanda Chiriacò; Giulia Soloperto; Antonio Greco; Francesco Conversano; Andrea Ragusa; Luca Menichetti; Sergio Casciaro
AIM To experimentally investigate the acoustical behavior of different dual-mode nanosized contrast agents (NPCAs) for echographic medical imaging at low ultrasound (US) frequency. METHODS We synthesized three different nanosized structures: (1) Pure silica nanospheres (SiNSs); (2) FePt-iron oxide (FePt-IO)-coated SiNSs; and (3) IO-coated SiNSs, employing three different diameter of SiNS-core (160, 330 and 660 nm). Tissue mimicking phantoms made of agarose gel solution containing 5 mg of different NPCAs in 2 mL-Eppendorf tubes, were insonified by a commercial echographic system at three different low US pulse values (2.5, 3.5 and 4.5 MHz). The raw radiofrequency signal, backscattered from each considered NPCA containing sample, has been processed in order to calculate the US average backscatter intensity and compare the acoustic behavior of the different NPCA types. RESULTS The highest US contrast was exhibited by pure SiNSs; FePt-IO-coated SiNSs acoustical behavior followed a similar trend of pure SiNSs with a slight difference in terms of brightness values. The acoustic response of the examined NPCAs resulted function of both SiNS diameter and US frequency. Specifically, higher US frequencies determined higher value of the backscatter for a given SiNS diameter. Frequency-dependent enhancement was marked for pure SiNSs and became less remarkable for FePt-IO-coated SiNSs, whereas IO-coated SiNSs resulted almost unaffected by such frequency variations. Pure and FePt-IO-coated SiNSs evidenced an image backscatter increasing with the diameter up to 330 nm. Conversely, among the types of NPCA tested, IO-coated SiNSs showed the lowest acoustical response for each synthesized diameter and employed US frequency, although a diameter-dependent raising trend was evidenced. CONCLUSION The US characterization of magnetically covered SiNS shows that FePt-IO, rather than IO, was the best magnetic coating for realizing NPCAs suitable for dual mode imaging of deep organs, combining US and magnetic resonance imaging.
Accreditation and Quality Assurance | 2012
Michela Poli; Debora Petroni; Silvia Pardini; Piero Salvadori; Luca Menichetti
The production of pharmaceuticals is one of the most highly regulated fields in terms of quality. The body of good manufacturing practice (GMP) represents the standard required by law; GMP embraces the guidelines that regulate all activities related to the production and quality control of medicinal products for human and veterinary use. This paper deals with the implementation of a quality management system (QMS) in compliance with GMP and ISO 9001 standards for the production and distribution of radiopharmaceuticals in a public research institute. The production of 2-[18F]fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose has been implemented according to GMP standards and has been licensed by the national Authority in 2007. In 2010, a project to orient the system’s GMP compliance to ISO 9001 standards has been approved. A QMS conforming to ISO 9001:2008 should be considered an important additional step in terms of quality, because ISO 9001 also takes into account economic and financial aspects, design and development aspects and introduces management review for measurement and analysis of the process with the aim of improving performances. The harmonization between GMP and ISO has been defined following the Pharmaceutical Quality System Q10 guideline developed by International Conference on Harmonization.