Matthias Friebe
Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals
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Featured researches published by Matthias Friebe.
Lancet Neurology | 2008
Christopher C. Rowe; Uwe Ackerman; William J. Browne; Rachel S. Mulligan; Kerryn L Pike; Graeme O'Keefe; Henry Tochon-Danguy; Gordon Chan; Salvatore U. Berlangieri; Gareth J. F. Jones; Kerryn L Dickinson-Rowe; Hank Kung; Wei Zhang; Mei Ping Kung; Daniel Skovronsky; Thomas Dyrks; Gerhard Holl; Sabine Krause; Matthias Friebe; Lutz Lehman; Stefanie Lindemann; Ludger Dinkelborg; Colin L. Masters; Victor L. Villemagne
BACKGROUNDnAmyloid-beta (Abeta) plaque formation is a hallmark of Alzheimers disease (AD) and precedes the onset of dementia. Abeta imaging should allow earlier diagnosis, but clinical application is hindered by the short decay half-life of current Abeta-specific ligands. (18)F-BAY94-9172 is an Abeta ligand that, due to the half-life of (18)F, is suitable for clinical use. We thus studied the effectiveness of this ligand in identifying patients with AD.nnnMETHODSn15 patients with mild AD, 15 healthy elderly controls, and five individuals with frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) were studied. (18)F-BAY94-9172 binding was quantified by use of the standardised uptake value ratio (SUVR), which was calculated for the neocortex by use of the cerebellum as reference region. SUVR images were visually rated as normal or AD.nnnFINDINGSn(18)F-BAY94-9172 binding matched the reported post-mortem distribution of Abeta plaques. All AD patients showed widespread neocortical binding, which was greater in the precuneus/posterior cingulate and frontal cortex than in the lateral temporal and parietal cortex. There was relative sparing of sensorimotor, occipital, and medial temporal cortex. Healthy controls and FTLD patients showed only white-matter binding, although three controls and one FTLD patient had mild uptake in frontal and precuneus cortex. At 90-120 min after injection, higher neocortical SUVR was observed in AD patients (2.0 [SD 0.3]) than in healthy controls (1.3 [SD 0.2]; p<0.0001) or FTLD patients (1.2 [SD 0.2]; p=0.009). Visual interpretation was 100% sensitive and 90% specific for detection of AD.nnnINTERPRETATIONn(18)F-BAY94-9172 PET discriminates between AD and FTLD or healthy controls and might facilitate integration of Abeta imaging into clinical practice.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2013
Dominic Franck; Torsten Kniess; Jörg Steinbach; Sabine Zitzmann-Kolbe; Matthias Friebe; Ludger Dinkelborg; Keith Graham
The [(18)F]fluorocyclobutyl group has the potential to be a metabolically stable prosthetic group for PET tracers. The synthesis of the radiolabeling precursor cis-cyclobutane-1,3-diyl bis(toluene-4-sulfonate) 8 was obtained from epibromohydrin in 7 steps (2% overall yield). The radiolabeling of this precursor 8 and its conjugation to L-tyrosine as a model system was successfully achieved to give the new non-natural amino acid 3-[(18)F]fluorocyclobutyl-L-tyrosine (L-3-[(18)F]FCBT) [(18)F]17 in 8% decay-corrected yield from the non-carrier-added [(18)F]fluoride. L-3-[(18)F]FCBT was investigated in vitro in different cancer cell lines to determine the uptake and stability. The tracer [(18)F]17 showed a time dependent uptake into different tumor cell lines (A549, NCI-H460, DU145) with the best uptake of 5.8% injected dose per 5×10(5) cells after 30min in human lung carcinoma cells A549. The stability of L-3-[(18)F]FCBT in human and rat plasma and the stability of the non-radioactive L-3-FCBT in rat hepatocytes were both found to be excellent. These results show that the non-natural amino acid L-3-[(18)F]FCBT is a promising metabolically stable radiotracer for positron emission tomography.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Erik Mittra; Norman Koglin; Camila Mosci; Meena Kumar; Aileen Hoehne; Khun Visith Keu; Andrei Iagaru; Andre Mueller; Mathias Berndt; Santiago Bullich; Matthias Friebe; Heribert Schmitt-Willich; Volker Gekeler; Luder Fels; Claudia Bacher-Stier; Dae Hyuk Moon; Frederick T. Chin; Andrew Stephens; Ludger Dinkelborg; Sanjiv S. Gambhir
Purpose (S)-4-(3-[18F]Fluoropropyl)-L-glutamic acid (18F-FSPG) is a novel radiopharmaceutical for Positron Emission Tomography (PET) imaging. It is a glutamate analogue that can be used to measure xC- transporter activity. This study was performed to assess the feasibility of 18F-FSPG for imaging orthotopic brain tumors in small animals and the translation of this approach in human subjects with intracranial malignancies. Experimental Design For the small animal study, GS9L glioblastoma cells were implanted into brains of Fischer rats and studied with 18F-FSPG, the 18F-labeled glucose derivative 18F-FDG and with the 18F-labeled amino acid derivative 18F-FET. For the human study, five subjects with either primary or metastatic brain cancer were recruited (mean age 50.4 years). After injection of 300 MBq of 18F-FSPG, 3 whole-body PET/Computed Tomography (CT) scans were obtained and safety parameters were measured. The three subjects with brain metastases also had an 18F-FDG PET/CT scan. Quantitative and qualitative comparison of the scans was performed to assess kinetics, biodistribution, and relative efficacy of the tracers. Results In the small animals, the orthotopic brain tumors were visualized well with 18F-FSPG. The high tumor uptake of 18F-FSPG in the GS9L model and the absence of background signal led to good tumor visualization with high contrast (tumor/brain ratio: 32.7). 18F-FDG and 18F-FET showed T/B ratios of 1.7 and 2.8, respectively. In the human pilot study, 18F-FSPG was well tolerated and there was similar distribution in all patients. All malignant lesions were positive with 18F-FSPG except for one low-grade primary brain tumor. In the 18F-FSPG-PET-positive tumors a similar T/B ratio was observed as in the animal model. Conclusions 18F-FSPG is a novel PET radiopharmaceutical that demonstrates good uptake in both small animal and human studies of intracranial malignancies. Future studies on larger numbers of subjects and a wider array of brain tumors are planned. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01186601
Archive | 2007
Ludger Dinkelborg; Matthias Friebe; Nikolaevna Raisa Krasikowa; Yuri Belokon; Fedorovna Olga Kuznetsova; Keith Graham; Lutz Lehmann; Mathias Berndt
Archive | 2003
Laura Borsi; Barbara Carnemolla; Enrica Balza; Patrizia Castellani; Luciano Zardi; Matthias Friebe; Christoph-Stephan Hilger
Archive | 2009
Ananth Srinivasan; Mathias Berndt; Keith Graham; Matthias Friebe; Heribert Schmitt-Willich
Archive | 2009
Ludger Dinkelborg; Heribert Schmitt-Willich; Keith Graham; Norman Koglin; Mathias Berndt; Matthias Friebe; Andre Müller
Archive | 2009
Matthias Friebe; Frédéric Dollé; Bertrand Kuhnast; Francoise Hinnen; Ludger Dinkelborg; Maren Hecht; Raphael Boisgard; Bertrand Tavitian
Archive | 2007
Matthias Friebe; Andrew Stephens; Ananth Srinivasan; Maren Hecht
Archive | 2014
Ludger Dinkelborg; Heribert Schmitt-Willich; Keith Graham; Norman Koglin; Mathias Berndt; Matthias Friebe; Andre Müller