WO1995031219A1 - The use of porphyrin-complex or expanded porphyrin-complex compounds as localization diagnosticum for infarction or necrosis - Google Patents

The use of porphyrin-complex or expanded porphyrin-complex compounds as localization diagnosticum for infarction or necrosis Download PDF

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WO1995031219A1
WO1995031219A1 PCT/EP1995/001762 EP9501762W WO9531219A1 WO 1995031219 A1 WO1995031219 A1 WO 1995031219A1 EP 9501762 W EP9501762 W EP 9501762W WO 9531219 A1 WO9531219 A1 WO 9531219A1
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porphyrin
infarction
necrosis
complex
diagnosticum
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PCT/EP1995/001762
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French (fr)
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Guy Jacques Felix Marchal
Yicheng Ni
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Schering Aktiengesellschaft
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Priority to EP95920012A priority Critical patent/EP0758907A1/en
Priority to JP7529337A priority patent/JPH10500122A/en
Publication of WO1995031219A1 publication Critical patent/WO1995031219A1/en
Priority to NO964780A priority patent/NO964780D0/en

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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K51/00Preparations containing radioactive substances for use in therapy or testing in vivo
    • A61K51/02Preparations containing radioactive substances for use in therapy or testing in vivo characterised by the carrier, i.e. characterised by the agent or material covalently linked or complexing the radioactive nucleus
    • A61K51/04Organic compounds
    • A61K51/0474Organic compounds complexes or complex-forming compounds, i.e. wherein a radioactive metal (e.g. 111In3+) is complexed or chelated by, e.g. a N2S2, N3S, NS3, N4 chelating group
    • A61K51/0485Porphyrins, texaphyrins wherein the nitrogen atoms forming the central ring system complex the radioactive metal
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K49/00Preparations for testing in vivo
    • A61K49/06Nuclear magnetic resonance [NMR] contrast preparations; Magnetic resonance imaging [MRI] contrast preparations
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K2123/00Preparations for testing in vivo

Definitions

  • porphyrin-complex or expanded porphyrin-complex compounds as localisation diagnosticum for Infarction or necrosis
  • the present invention relates to the use of porphyrin- complex and expanded porphyrin-complex compounds for use as a diagnosticum, in particular for use as a diagnosticum for the detection, localization, and monitoring of an infarction, and of a necrosis .
  • Suitable porphyrin-complex compounds are subject of DE-A-4,232, 925, DE-A-4, 305, 523, EP-A-336, 879, and EP-A-355, 041. The subject matter of these applications are included by cross reference. These porphyrin-complex compounds are used as a pharmaceutical preparation for the diagnosis and therapy of tumours .
  • porphyrin-complex compounds are expanded prophyrin-complex compounds (17) .
  • the present invention is based on the inside that these porphyrin-complex compounds can be used for the detection, localization, and monitoring of an infarction, and of a necrosis, such as ischemic, alcohol, and biliary obstruction, induced necrosis, and further laser induced hepatic, renal and muscular necrosis.
  • a necrosis such as ischemic, alcohol, and biliary obstruction, induced necrosis, and further laser induced hepatic, renal and muscular necrosis.
  • infarction localization diagnosticum is primarily exemplified for a myocardial infarction and for a renal infarction, but it will be obvious for a skilled person that due to similar pathophysiological situations the same experimental findings apply to other infarction such as those of the intestines, lung, brain and the like.
  • Myocardial infarction is not a stable pathophysiological situation, but instead progresses to its definite form over several weeks to months. This process can be subdivided, although overlapping, in at least three periods.
  • the first 24 hours after the start of ischemia (acute evolving myocardial infarction) damage progresses as a wavefront phenomenon from the subendocardium to include the myocardium transmurally.
  • this area stabilizes and fibrosis is formed as a healing process.
  • the third phase (healed infarction) starts after all the damaged tissue is replaced by a fibrotic scar. During this phase, considerable remodelling takes place. So far no accurate and reliable technique exists that can determine the evolution phase of the myocardial infarction antemortem.
  • nuclear scintigraphy with perfusion and infarct avid tracers (3-5) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) without and with different contrast media (6-9) are still far from optimal in terms of sensitivity, specificity, spatial resolution, contrast and reliability (1) .
  • Necrosis is a status of local tissue death, and results from the effects of diseases resulting in an adverse and detrimental effect on body tissue. Necrosis may be caused by radiation, injury, chemicals, local oxygen deficiency, infections, cancer, and the like. Monitoring, localization and detection of necrosis allowes the follow up and effectiveness determination of all kinds of diagnostic and therapeutic therapies and treatments.
  • the present invention relates to the use of these porphyrin-complex compounds or metalloporphyrins, for the localization, visualization of an infarction and of a necrosis.
  • This invention is based on experimental results with myocardial and renal infarctions, and with hepatic, renal and muscle necrosis demonstrating an extraordinary effect with one-to-one correlation between magnetic resonance images (MRI) and histochemical preparations. This preclinical result open new horizons for especially the cardiac and necrotic imaging.
  • MRI magnetic resonance images
  • porphyrin-complex compounds comprise a ligand having the general formula I
  • R 1 represents a hydrogen atom, a straight or branched C ⁇ -C,. alkyl group, a C_-C 12 aralkyl group or a OR' group wherein R' is a hydrogen atom or a C ⁇ C. alkyl group,
  • R 2 and R 3 represent a group CO-Z or a group (NH) o -(A) -NH-D, wherein Z is a group OL with L is an inorganic or organic cation or a C 1 -C 4 alkyl group, A is a phenylenoxy group, a C,-C 12 alkylene group possibly interrupted by one or more oxygen atoms, or a C 7 -C 12 aralkylene group, o and q independently represent an integer 0 or 1, and D represents an hydrogen atom or a group CO-A (COOL) o - (H) m with m equals 0 or 1 under the provisio that the sum of m and o equals 1;
  • R 5 when K is formula Ila has the same meaning as R 4 and when K has the formula lib has the same meaning as D, under the proviso that a direct oxygen-nitrogen bond is not allowed, wherein L 1 has the meaning of a C 1 -C 6 alkyl group or an inorganic or organic cation and wherein
  • L 2 , L 3 and L 4 independently have the same meaning as L 1 or are an hydrogen atom, under the proviso that the complex former comprises at least two free carbon acid groups, and optionally for charge mutualization of the metalloporphyrin other anions, and pharmaceutically acceptable addition salts and carriers and diluants.
  • the porphyrin-complex compounds comprises at least one paramagnetic metal ion, preferably di- or trivalent ions of the metal elements having the atomic number 21-29, 42, 44 and 57-70.
  • Suitable metal ions are for instance chromium (III) , manganese (II) , manganese (III) , iron (III), cobalt (II), cobalt (III), nickel (II), copper (II) , praseodymium (II) , neodymium (III) , samarium (III) and ytterbium (III) .
  • chromium (III) chromium
  • manganese (II) manganese (III)
  • iron (III) iron
  • cobalt (II) cobalt
  • cobalt (III) nickel
  • nickel (II) copper
  • praseodymium (II) neodymium (III)
  • radioisotopes of the elements having the atomic number 27, 29-32, 37-39, 42-51, 62, 64, 70, 75, 77, 82 or 83 are preferred. It is noted that when the complex compounds comprises various metal ions these metal ions may originate from the group for MR visualization and radioscintigraphic visualization.
  • the metal ion may be complexed in the porphyrin skeleton, in the so called expanded porhyrin skeleton, and/or in the complex former.
  • porphyrin-complex compounds are the disodium salt of the digadolinium complex of N,N' -Bis [9- carboxylato-2 , 5, 8-tris (carboxylatomethyl ) -2,5, 8-triazanonyi- carbamoyl] -mesoporphyrin-IX-13 , 17-diamides (Gd-MP) .
  • the diagnosticum has the form of a pharmaceutical formulation suitable for intra-veneou ⁇ or intra-arterial injection in the form of a solution or suspension.
  • the diagnosticum may comprise suitable additives, such as a buffer (tromethamine) , complex formers such as diethylenetriaminpenta-acetic acid, electrolyte such as sodium chloride, antioxydantia such as ascorbinic acid.
  • the diagnosticum may comprise the porphyrin or expanded porphyrin complex compound in an amount of 0.0001 - 10.0 mmol/kg body weight. Preferred is an amount of 0.005 - 2 mmol/kg body weight, more preferred 0.01 - 1.0 mmol/kg body weight.
  • the actual dose is also dependent on the infarction to be localized, on the patient and on the localization technique to be used.
  • Gadolinium mesoporphyrin (Gd-MP) and manganese tetraphenylporphyrin (Mn-TPP) have been used.
  • the model of myocardial infarction was produced in rats by ligation of the left coronary artery according to an established technique (15) .
  • Two groups of rats (12 in each) with myocardial infarction aging 2 to 24 hours received intravenously either Gd-MP (IDF GmbH, Berlin) or Mn-TPP (IDF GmbH, Berlin) at doses of 0.1, 0.05 and 0.01 mmol/kg (4 rats each) .
  • Gd-MP IDF GmbH, Berlin
  • Mn-TPP IDF GmbH, Berlin
  • the excised heart was incubated with triphenyl tetrazolium chloride (TTC) , which is a reliable histochemical staining to distinguish the infarcted from the non-infarcted myocardium (16) .
  • TTC triphenyl tetrazolium chloride
  • two groups of rats (6 in each) were used as controls and underwent the same imaging and histochemical procedures, i.e. one group with infarction but without contrast agent injection, the other group with injection (3 with Gd-MP, 3 with Mn-TPP) but without infarction.
  • SI signal intensities
  • the MRI was performed 10 hours after Mn-TPP (0.05 mmol/kg body weight) intervenou ⁇ injection.
  • the technique is so sensitive that even lesions between 1 to ? mm in size were easily detectable (Fig.2) .
  • a rat with partial renal infarction of the right kidney was injected with Gd-MP (0.1 mmol/kg body weight by intervenous injection) . 24 Hours after Gd-MP injection, the Gd-content
  • the contrast agents used were Mn-TPPS4 (Mn-meso-tetra- (4-sulfonato-phenyl) -porphyrine (available from Porphyrin Products Inc., Logan, Utah, USA), in an amount of 0.05 mmol/kg, and Gd-Mn-porphyrin (Mn(III) - ⁇ N-Bis- [11- carboxylato-2-oxo-4,7,10-tris- (carboxylatomethyl) -1,4,7,10- tetraazaundecyl] -methylpyrroporphyrin-XXI-amide ⁇ -acetate, Gd- complex, sodium salt can be prepared according to example 1/14 in WO84/07894) .
  • Methylpyrroporphyrinethylester (Aldrich Chemicals) is reacted with hydrazine in pyridine and subsequently with manganese acetate in acetic acid.
  • the obtained intermediate is reacted with DTPA-monoanhydride-monoethylester in absolute N,N-dimethylformamide and addition of triethylamine.
  • hydrolysis and neutralisation complexation is carried out with the use of gadolinium acetate in an amount of 0.05 mmol/kg.
  • the experimental results are summarized in tables 3 and 4.
  • Gd content and signal intensity in a rat with partial renal infarction measured 24 hours after Gd-MP (0.1 mmol/kg) .
  • Fig. 1 (A-C). MRI and macroscopic photographs of a rodent heart with myocardial infarction. The MRI was performed 24 hours after Gd-MP
  • NEX 6
  • the graduation near the frame on the right side represents 1 cm.
  • TTC triphenyl tetrazolium chloride
  • Fig. 2 (A-C). MRI and macroscopic photographs of a rodent heart with local injury caused by ligation. Such minute necrotic lesions were found at the ligation sites in two rats who failed to form real infarction and were excluded as successful models from the study. The MRI was performed 10 hours after Mn-TPP (0.05 mmol/kg) intravenous injection and immediately after sacrificing the animal.
  • Mn-TPP 0.05 mmol/kg
  • A, B On both the coronal (A) and axial (B) MR images (the same parameters as in fig. 1), an hyperintense lesion(arrow) of approximately 1 mm in size can be clearly seen in the left ventricular wall, despite a partial volume effect (i.e. the diameter of the lesion is smaller than the thickness of the MR slice; otherwise the lesion would appear brighter).
  • the graduation near the frame on the right side represents 1 cm.
  • C TTC stained axial section of the heart on a similar plane to the MR image (B) displays the ligature and adjacent minute unstained necrotic lesion (arrow).
  • FIG. 3 (A - D). MRI and macroscopic photographs of a rat with partial renal infarction in the right kidney.
  • FIG. 4 A-D Axial Tl W SE MR images and macroscopic photographs of rat liver with alcohol induced coagulation necrosis.
  • Gd-MP gadolinium mesoporphyrin

Abstract

The invention relates to the use of porphyrin-complex or expanded porphyrin-complex compounds for the manufacture of a diagnosticum for the localization of an infarction and of a necrosis, wherein the infarction or necrosis may comprise an infarction of heart, kidney, intestine, lung, and/or brain, and wherein the porphyrin-complex compound may be Gd-MP and/or Mn-TPP. Gd-MP: Bis-Gd-DTPA-{Mesoporphyrin-IX-13, 17-bis[2-oxo-4,7,10,10-tetra-(carboxylatomethyl)-1,4,7,10-tetraazadecyl]-13, 17-diamide}, bis sodium salt of formula (A); Mn-TPP: Manganese-(III)-{Tetrakis-[3]-(carboxylatomethoxy-phenyl)-porphyrin}-acetate, tetra sodium salt of formula (B).

Description

The use of porphyrin-complex or expanded porphyrin-complex compounds as localisation diagnosticum for Infarction or necrosis
The present invention relates to the use of porphyrin- complex and expanded porphyrin-complex compounds for use as a diagnosticum, in particular for use as a diagnosticum for the detection, localization, and monitoring of an infarction, and of a necrosis .
Suitable porphyrin-complex compounds are subject of DE-A-4,232, 925, DE-A-4, 305, 523, EP-A-336, 879, and EP-A-355, 041. The subject matter of these applications are included by cross reference. These porphyrin-complex compounds are used as a pharmaceutical preparation for the diagnosis and therapy of tumours .
Other suitable porphyrin-complex compounds are expanded prophyrin-complex compounds (17) . The present invention is based on the inside that these porphyrin-complex compounds can be used for the detection, localization, and monitoring of an infarction, and of a necrosis, such as ischemic, alcohol, and biliary obstruction, induced necrosis, and further laser induced hepatic, renal and muscular necrosis.
Hereafter the use as an infarction localization diagnosticum is primarily exemplified for a myocardial infarction and for a renal infarction, but it will be obvious for a skilled person that due to similar pathophysiological situations the same experimental findings apply to other infarction such as those of the intestines, lung, brain and the like.
Myocardial infarction is not a stable pathophysiological situation, but instead progresses to its definite form over several weeks to months. This process can be subdivided, although overlapping, in at least three periods. The first 24 hours after the start of ischemia (acute evolving myocardial infarction) damage progresses as a wavefront phenomenon from the subendocardium to include the myocardium transmurally. During the second phase (established myocardial infarction) this area stabilizes and fibrosis is formed as a healing process. The third phase (healed infarction) starts after all the damaged tissue is replaced by a fibrotic scar. During this phase, considerable remodelling takes place. So far no accurate and reliable technique exists that can determine the evolution phase of the myocardial infarction antemortem.
The most important long-term prognostic factor after a myocardial infarction is the amount of myocardial tissue lost during this process. So far, no accurate and reliable technique exists to demonstrate the end-point, the amount of irreversibly damaged tissue antemortem.
In the three phases described above, it is of extreme importance to have an accurate status about the amount and localization of the affected myocardial tissue. During an evolving myocardial infarction, it is important to assess the amount of tissue at risk, the amount already lost, and from these parameters the amount of tissue that can be salvaged by reperfusion by thrombolysis or emergency surgical revascularisation, according to the hemodynamic status of the patient. In a patient with unstable angina, it is often impossible to discriminate between reversibly injured (akinetic, stunned) myocardium and irreversibly damaged tissue. This would nevertheless have a profound impact on the therapeutic strategy. In the case of complications in the phase of established infarction, requiring surgical intervention, it is known that mortality is highest when dead tissue is revascularized, causing hemorrhagic infarctions. An operative strategy of repair of the ventricular septum defect or mitral insufficiency with selective revascularisation of non-necrotic tissue could save lifes. Up to now, a satisfactory in vivo method for localizing and defining an infarction and the size of an infarction has not yet been available, which impedes the progress of both the basic research and clinical practice (1) . For instance, current imaging techniques such as echocardiography (2) , 1219
nuclear scintigraphy with perfusion and infarct avid tracers (3-5) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) without and with different contrast media (6-9) are still far from optimal in terms of sensitivity, specificity, spatial resolution, contrast and reliability (1) .
Similar contemplations apply for infarctions of the kidney intestines, lung and brain.
Necrosis is a status of local tissue death, and results from the effects of diseases resulting in an adverse and detrimental effect on body tissue. Necrosis may be caused by radiation, injury, chemicals, local oxygen deficiency, infections, cancer, and the like. Monitoring, localization and detection of necrosis allowes the follow up and effectiveness determination of all kinds of diagnostic and therapeutic therapies and treatments.
The present invention relates to the use of these porphyrin-complex compounds or metalloporphyrins, for the localization, visualization of an infarction and of a necrosis. This invention is based on experimental results with myocardial and renal infarctions, and with hepatic, renal and muscle necrosis demonstrating an extraordinary effect with one-to-one correlation between magnetic resonance images (MRI) and histochemical preparations. This preclinical result open new horizons for especially the cardiac and necrotic imaging.
The porphyrin-complex compounds comprise a ligand having the general formula I
Figure imgf000005_0001
(I) and at least one metal ion suitable for ex corporal determination. Suitable metal ions have an atomic number of 21-32, 37-39, 42-51 and 57-83. In this general formula: R1 represents a hydrogen atom, a straight or branched C^-C,. alkyl group, a C_-C12 aralkyl group or a OR' group wherein R' is a hydrogen atom or a C^C. alkyl group,
R2 and R3 represent a group CO-Z or a group (NH)o-(A) -NH-D, wherein Z is a group OL with L is an inorganic or organic cation or a C1-C4 alkyl group, A is a phenylenoxy group, a C,-C12 alkylene group possibly interrupted by one or more oxygen atoms, or a C7-C12 aralkylene group, o and q independently represent an integer 0 or 1, and D represents an hydrogen atom or a group CO-A (COOL)o- (H)m with m equals 0 or 1 under the provisio that the sum of m and o equals 1;
R3 represents a group (C=M) (NR4)o- (A) - (NR5) -K, wherein M represents an oxygen atom or two hydrogen atoms,* R" represents a group (A) -H; and K represents a complex former having the general formula Ila or lib, and
R5 when K is formula Ila has the same meaning as R4 and when K has the formula lib has the same meaning as D, under the proviso that a direct oxygen-nitrogen bond is not allowed, wherein L1 has the meaning of a C1 -C6 alkyl group or an inorganic or organic cation and wherein
L2, L3 and L4 independently have the same meaning as L1 or are an hydrogen atom, under the proviso that the complex former comprises at least two free carbon acid groups, and optionally for charge mutualization of the metalloporphyrin other anions, and pharmaceutically acceptable addition salts and carriers and diluants.
Figure imgf000007_0001
Figure imgf000007_0002
For MR localization the porphyrin-complex compounds comprises at least one paramagnetic metal ion, preferably di- or trivalent ions of the metal elements having the atomic number 21-29, 42, 44 and 57-70. Suitable metal ions are for instance chromium (III) , manganese (II) , manganese (III) , iron (III), cobalt (II), cobalt (III), nickel (II), copper (II) , praseodymium (II) , neodymium (III) , samarium (III) and ytterbium (III) . Prefered are gadolinium (III) , terbium (III) , dysprosium (III) , holmium (III) , erbium (III) and iron (III) .
For radioscintigraphic determination radioisotopes of the elements having the atomic number 27, 29-32, 37-39, 42-51, 62, 64, 70, 75, 77, 82 or 83 are preferred. It is noted that when the complex compounds comprises various metal ions these metal ions may originate from the group for MR visualization and radioscintigraphic visualization.
Futhermore the metal ion may be complexed in the porphyrin skeleton, in the so called expanded porhyrin skeleton, and/or in the complex former.
Examples of the porphyrin-complex compounds are the disodium salt of the digadolinium complex of N,N' -Bis [9- carboxylato-2 , 5, 8-tris (carboxylatomethyl ) -2,5, 8-triazanonyi- carbamoyl] -mesoporphyrin-IX-13 , 17-diamides (Gd-MP) . The disodium salt of the digadolinium complex of manganese (III) - N,N' -Bis [ll-carboxylato-2-oxo-4, 7- bis (carboxylatomethyl) -10- (ethoxycarbonylmethyl) -1,4,7,10- tetraazaundecyl] -3 , 8-bis (1-propyl) -porphyrin-IX-13, 17- diamides -acetates, and the digadolinium complex of manganese (III) - N,N' -Bis [ll-carboxylato-2-oxo-4, 7- bis (carboxylatomethyl) -10- (ethoxycarbonylmethyl) -1, 4, 7, 10- tetraazaundecyl] -3 , 8-bis (1-propyl) -porphyrin-IX-13, 17- diamides -acetates (Mn-TPP) .
The diagnosticum has the form of a pharmaceutical formulation suitable for intra-veneouε or intra-arterial injection in the form of a solution or suspension. The diagnosticum may comprise suitable additives, such as a buffer (tromethamine) , complex formers such as diethylenetriaminpenta-acetic acid, electrolyte such as sodium chloride, antioxydantia such as ascorbinic acid.
Furthermore additives, tencides and the like may be added.
Gd-MP
Bis-Gd-DTPA-{Mesoporphyrin-IX-13, 17-bis[2-oxo-4, 7, 10, 10-tetra-(carboxyla- tomethyl)-1 , 4, 7, 10-tetraazadecyl]-13, 17-diamide}, bis sodium salt
Figure imgf000009_0001
Mn-TPP:
Manganese-(lll)-{Tetrakis-[3]-(carboxylatomethoxy-phenyl)-porphyrin}-acetate, tetra sodium salt
Figure imgf000009_0002
The diagnosticum may comprise the porphyrin or expanded porphyrin complex compound in an amount of 0.0001 - 10.0 mmol/kg body weight. Preferred is an amount of 0.005 - 2 mmol/kg body weight, more preferred 0.01 - 1.0 mmol/kg body weight. The actual dose is also dependent on the infarction to be localized, on the patient and on the localization technique to be used.
Hereafter the use of a diagnosticum comprising these specific metalloporphyrins, for the localization of an infarction and of necrosis, according to the invention will be shown for the visualization of an acute myocardial infarction and renal infarction, and of necrosis. The result obtained so far did not encounter neither false positive nor false negative findings. Striking is the almost perfect matching of the ex corporal localization and the histochemical confirmation.
In the experiments two paramagnetic metalloporphyrins have been used which were originally developped as potential tumour specific MRI contrast agents (10-14) . Gadolinium mesoporphyrin (Gd-MP) and manganese tetraphenylporphyrin (Mn-TPP) have been used.
Example 1
The model of myocardial infarction was produced in rats by ligation of the left coronary artery according to an established technique (15) . Two groups of rats (12 in each) with myocardial infarction aging 2 to 24 hours received intravenously either Gd-MP (IDF GmbH, Berlin) or Mn-TPP (IDF GmbH, Berlin) at doses of 0.1, 0.05 and 0.01 mmol/kg (4 rats each) . After an interval of 3 to 24 hours postinjection, axial and coronal Tl weighted spin echo MR images were obtained immediately before and after sacrificing the animals . The excised heart was incubated with triphenyl tetrazolium chloride (TTC) , which is a reliable histochemical staining to distinguish the infarcted from the non-infarcted myocardium (16) . In addition, two groups of rats (6 in each) were used as controls and underwent the same imaging and histochemical procedures, i.e. one group with infarction but without contrast agent injection, the other group with injection (3 with Gd-MP, 3 with Mn-TPP) but without infarction. The difference between the infarcted and non- infarcted myocardium seen on MR images was quantified by measuring the signal intensities (SI) with a monitor defined region of interest and expressed as contrast ration
(CR) :CR = SI infarct / SI noninfarct (mean ± SD) . The metal content of the tissue was measured by ICP-AES. Finally the MR images were carefully compared with the corresponding macro- and microscopic tissue preparations and correlated with the results of local metal content measurement.
The infarct of the 6 control rats could not be discerned by MRI without contrast media. However, 3 to 24 hours after injection of either Gd-MP or Mn-TPP, all 24 rats with myocardial infarction exhibited on MR images a clear delineation of the infarcted areas of the heart, which precisely matched the areas of negative staining on the histochemical samples (Fig.l) . The CRs between the infarcted and noninfarcted regions were 3.40 ± 0.26 at 3 hours and 1.92 ± 0.17 at 24 hours after contrast agent injection. Even the small dose of 0.01 mmol/kg worked well (CR = 1.84 ± 0.13 at 10 hours postinjection) . Neither false positive findings (i.e. contrast enhancement in noninfarcted area) nor false negative findings (i.e. infarcted myocardium not enhanced with the agents) were obtained. The Gd content was as much as 9 fold higher in the infarcted myocardium (Table 1) , suggesting that the MRI signal enhancement is mainly due to a preferential accumulation of metalloporphyrins in infarcted tissue.
Example 2
Using the same model of myocardial infarction, in two rats minor necrotic lesions were found at the ligation sides.
The MRI was performed 10 hours after Mn-TPP (0.05 mmol/kg body weight) intervenouε injection. The technique is so sensitive that even lesions between 1 to ? mm in size were easily detectable (Fig.2) . Example 3
A rat with partial renal infarction of the right kidney was injected with Gd-MP (0.1 mmol/kg body weight by intervenous injection) . 24 Hours after Gd-MP injection, the Gd-content
(measured with ICP-AES technique) of the infarcted and non infarcted kidney were similar but the signal intensities was at least two fold higher for the infarcted kidney (Table 2) . Presumably the mechanism for metalloporphyrin induced specific enhancement seems not only related to an accumulation of the porphyrin-complex compound in the infarcted tissue. An increased relaxivity of the metalloporphyrins induced by a change in local molecular environment plays also a role in the observed increased signal intensity (Fig. 3) .
Example 4
In order to evaluate the potential of these agents for the detection and monitoring of other types of necrosis following experiments were performed.
Spontaneous liver necrosis was induced by ligation of the common bile duct in rats . 72 Hours after surgery both types of metalloporphyrins (Gd-MP and Mn-TPP) were intravenously injected at a dose of 0.05 mmol/kg. Already 10 minutes after injection areas of strong enhancement could be observed in the liver. This enhancement lasted for about one week. Macroscopic examination confirmed that the enhancing areas corresponded to cholestatically related liver necrosis. A second experiment consisted in the induction of local necrosis in liver, kidney and muscle in rats by local injection of absolute alcohol. Imaging 8 to 24 hours after alcoholisation of both metalloporphyrins caused a concentric enhancement of the induced lesions. Those remained enhanced for several days. Macroscopy and microscopy after sacrifice confirmed the necrotic nature of the lesions (Fig. 4A, 4B, 4C) . Example 5
Infarcted myocardium induced the model of example 1 and laser induced necrosis using standard laser model techniques were studied in rats. Before injection of the contrast agents, the induced necrosis were not visible on MR images. However, positive enhancement appeared in these lesions after contrast agent injection and persisted for more than 24 hours.
The contrast agents used were Mn-TPPS4 (Mn-meso-tetra- (4-sulfonato-phenyl) -porphyrine (available from Porphyrin Products Inc., Logan, Utah, USA), in an amount of 0.05 mmol/kg, and Gd-Mn-porphyrin (Mn(III) -{N-Bis- [11- carboxylato-2-oxo-4,7,10-tris- (carboxylatomethyl) -1,4,7,10- tetraazaundecyl] -methylpyrroporphyrin-XXI-amide}-acetate, Gd- complex, sodium salt can be prepared according to example 1/14 in WO84/07894) .
Methylpyrroporphyrinethylester (Aldrich Chemicals) is reacted with hydrazine in pyridine and subsequently with manganese acetate in acetic acid. The obtained intermediate is reacted with DTPA-monoanhydride-monoethylester in absolute N,N-dimethylformamide and addition of triethylamine. After hydrolysis and neutralisation complexation is carried out with the use of gadolinium acetate in an amount of 0.05 mmol/kg. The experimental results are summarized in tables 3 and 4.
The fact that necrosis of different origine, vascular and biliary infarction and alcoholisation, all show similar degrees of enhancement opens new prospectives for the monitoring of therapies that ultimately cause tissue necrosis, such as radiotherapy, chemotherapy, thermotherapy, laser therapy, ultrasound and radiofrequency ablation, alcoholisation, etc. ... Table 1
Gd content and MRI signal intensity in rats with myocardial infarction measured 24 hours after Gd-MP (0.05 mmol/kg)
Myocardium Gd (μmol/g) Signal Intensity ICP-AES (ROD
infarcted 0.065 ± 0.006 422 ± 31
non infarcted 0.007 ± 0.002 193 ± 17
ratio* 9.29 2.19
Note: *infarcted/non infarcted
Table 2
Gd content and signal intensity in a rat with partial renal infarction measured 24 hours after Gd-MP (0.1 mmol/kg) .
Tissue Gd (μmol/g) Signal intensity ICP-AES (24 h)
infarcted kidney 0.75 1340
non-infarcted kidney 0.79 638 Table 3
MRI Findings after myocardial infarction*
Signal Intensity CR
Normal Infarcted Myocardium Myocardium Infarct/Normal
Mn-TPPS4 343 583 1.7 Gd-Mn-porphyrin 320 669 2.1
* The agents were injected 12 hours before MR imaging in rats with myocardial infarction (MI) aging 24 hours.
Table 4
MR Imaging in Laser Induced Necrosis1
Signal Intensity CR
Precontrast 24 h post- contrast Lesion Liver tissue Necrosis Normal
Mn-TPPS4 518 ± 21 625 ± 34 1063 ± 52 1.7 Gd-Mn-porphyrin 501 ± 30 593 ± 27 1126 ± 18 1.9
* The signal intensities of the liver and necrotic lesions were derived from pre- and 24 hours postcontrast MR images. Legends for figures:
Fig. 1 (A-C). MRI and macroscopic photographs of a rodent heart with myocardial infarction. The MRI was performed 24 hours after Gd-MP
(O.lmmol/kg) intravenous injection and immediately after sacrificing the animal.
A, B: Coronal (A) and axial (B) Tl weighted spin echo images (TR/TE =
300/15 msec, slice thickness = 2 mm, FOV = 100 mm, matrix size = 256 x 256,
NEX = 6) display a strongly signal enhancment in almost all left ventrical wall including part of the ventricular septum (arrows) but not some papillary myocardial structures (arrowheads). The graduation near the frame on the right side represents 1 cm.
C: Axial section of the heart on a similar plane to the axial MR image (B), incubated with 1 % triphenyl tetrazolium chloride (TTC) for 15 minutes and fixed overnight with 10 % formalin, shows the left ventrical wall including part of the septum as unstained, (pale) infarcted area. Arrowheads indicate the intact myocardial papillae shown in B.
Fig. 2 (A-C). MRI and macroscopic photographs of a rodent heart with local injury caused by ligation. Such minute necrotic lesions were found at the ligation sites in two rats who failed to form real infarction and were excluded as successful models from the study. The MRI was performed 10 hours after Mn-TPP (0.05 mmol/kg) intravenous injection and immediately after sacrificing the animal.
A, B: On both the coronal (A) and axial (B) MR images (the same parameters as in fig. 1), an hyperintense lesion(arrow) of approximately 1 mm in size can be clearly seen in the left ventricular wall, despite a partial volume effect (i.e. the diameter of the lesion is smaller than the thickness of the MR slice; otherwise the lesion would appear brighter). The graduation near the frame on the right side represents 1 cm. C: TTC stained axial section of the heart on a similar plane to the MR image (B) displays the ligature and adjacent minute unstained necrotic lesion (arrow).
Fig. 3 (A - D). MRI and macroscopic photographs of a rat with partial renal infarction in the right kidney.
A - C: Axial Tl weighted spin echo images (TR/TE = 600/15 msec, the rest parameters are the same as in Fig. 1 A and B.
A : On precontrast plain scan in the right kidney, infarcted and noninfarcted parts cannot be discerned.
B : Ten minutes after Gd-MP 0.1 mmol/kg) intravenous injection, the noninfarcted parenchyma (lower part) is strongly enhanced in contrast with the unenhanced infarcted parenchyma (upper part), which is gradually filled up with time by the agent (images not shown).
C : Forty-eight hours postcontrast, when the signal intensity of the noninfarcted kidney (lower part) has almost normalized, the infarcted upper part of the kidney is still strikingly enhanced.
D : Macroscopic view of the right kidney on a similar section as in C. Note how well the areas of the infarcted and noninfarcted parenchyma seen on the specimen match with the contrast enhanced MR image (C).
Legends for Fig. 4 A-D: Axial Tl W SE MR images and macroscopic photographs of rat liver with alcohol induced coagulation necrosis.
A. On precontrast image, the 10 hours old necrotic lesion (arrow) is isointense and therefore can not be detected.
B. Ten minutes after intravenous injection of gadolinium mesoporphyrin (Gd-MP, 0.05 mmol kg), the lesion (arrow) appears hypointense with some central bright spots (blood vessels). The lesion concentrically enhances with time whereas the liver intensity progressively decreases (images not shown).
C. 24 hours later when the liver intensity has largely decreased, the bright coagulation lesion appears bright (arrow) with some central dark spots. This suggests a specific retention and a strong affinity of the metalloporphyrin for the necrosis.
D. Macroscopic photograph of the liver section in the plane similar to MR images. The alcohol induced coagulation necrosis (arrow) has the same morphology with some intralesional blood vessels, as shown on the contrast enhanced MR images.
References
1. Roberts R, Kleiman N S. Earlier diagnosis and treatment of acute myocardial infarction necessitates the need for a new diagnostic mind¬ set'. Circulation 1994; 89: 872-881.
2. Stamm R, Gibson R, Bishop H, Carabello B, Beller G, Martin R, Echocardiographic detection of infarct-localized asynergy and remote asynergy during acute myocardial infarction: correlation with the extent of angiographic coronary disease. Circulation 1983; 67: 233-234.
3. Wackers FJT, Busemann Sokole E, Samson G et al. Value and limitations of thallium-201 scintigraphy in the acute phase of myocardial infarction. N Engl J Med 1976; 295:1-5.
4. Lahiri A, Bhattacharya A, Carrio I. Antimyosin antibody imaging of myocardial necrosis. In: Zaret BL, Beller GA, eds. Nuclear cardiology: state of the art and future directions. Philadelphia: Mosby - Year Book, 1993; 331-338.
5. Zaret BL, Wackers FJ. Nuclear cardiology (review). N Engl J Med 1993; 329: 775-783.
6. De Roos A., Van Rossum A., Van der Wall E., Postema S., Doornbos J., Matheijssen N. Reperfused and nonreperfused myocardial infarction: diagnostic potential of Gd-DTPA-enhanced MR Imaging. Radiology 1989; 172: 717-720.
7. Saeed M., Wendland M., Takehara Y., Masui T., Higgins C. Reperfusion and irreversible myocardial injury: identification with a nonionic MR imaging contrast medium. Radiology 1992; 182: 675-683.
8. Weissleder R., Lee A., Khaw B., Shen T, Brady T. Antimyosin-labeled monocrystalline iron oxide allows detection of myocardial infarct: MR antibody imaging. Radiology 1992; 182: 381-385.
9. Johnston D, Thompson R, Liu P. Magnetic resonance imaging during acute myocardial infarction. Am } Cardiol 1986; 58: 214-219. 10. Chen. C, Cohen ]., Myers C, Sohn M. Paramagnetic metalloporphyrins as potential contrast agents in NMR imaging. FEBS letters 1984; 168: 70- 74.
11. Nelson J., Schmiedl U., Shankland E. Metalloporphyrins as tumor- seeking MRI contrast media and as potential selective treatment sensitizers. Invest Radiol 1990; 25: S71-73.
12. Nelson J., Schmiedl U. Porphyrins as contrast media. Magn Res Med 1991; 22: 366-371.
13. Ogan M., Revel D., Brasch R. Metalloporphyrin contrast enhancement of tumors in magnetic resonance imaging. A study of human carcinoma, lymphoma, and fibrosarcoma in mice. Invest Radiol 1987; 22: 822-828.
14. Van Zijl PCM, Place DA, Cohen JS, Faustino PJ, Lyon RC, Patronas NJ. Metalloporphyrin magnetic resonance contrast agents: feasibility of tumor-specific magnetic resonance imaging. Acta Radiol suppl (Stockh)1990; 374: 75-79.
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Claims

P HP/sm/L-68pctCLAIMS
1. The use of porphyrin-complex or expanded porphyrin- complex compounds for the manufacture of a diagnosticum for the localization of an infarction and of a necrosis.
2. Use of claim 1, wherein the infarction and/or the necrosis comprises an infarction or necrosis of hart, kidney, intestine, lung, and/or brain.
3. Use of claim 1 or 2, wherein the porphyrin-complex compounds comprise a radioactive and/or (super) paramagnetic label metal.
4. Use of claim 1-3, wherein the diagnosticum comprises the porphyrin-complex compound in an amount of 0.001 - 1.0 mmol/kg body weigh .
5. Use of claim 1-4, wherein the porphyrin-complex compound is Gd-MP and/or Mn-TPP.
PCT/EP1995/001762 1994-05-11 1995-05-10 The use of porphyrin-complex or expanded porphyrin-complex compounds as localization diagnosticum for infarction or necrosis WO1995031219A1 (en)

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NO964780A NO964780D0 (en) 1994-05-11 1996-11-11 Use of Porphyrin Complex Compounds or Expanded Porphyrin Complex Compounds as Localization Diagnosis for Infarction or Necrosis

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WO1999043317A1 (en) * 1998-02-25 1999-09-02 Schering Aktiengesellschaft Necrosis-affine compounds and the utilization thereof in order to produce preparations for pharmacotherapy
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US6495118B1 (en) 1997-09-26 2002-12-17 Schering Aktiengesellschaft Lipophilic metal complexes for necrosis and infarction imaging
WO2004019936A1 (en) * 2002-08-27 2004-03-11 Schering Aktiengesellschaft Peroxynitrite rearrangement catalysts used for the treatment or prophylaxis of diseases caused by peroxynitrite-mediated reactions
US7341711B2 (en) 2004-03-12 2008-03-11 Guerbet Porphyrin compounds and their use in high-field MRI
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WO1999016474A1 (en) * 1997-09-26 1999-04-08 Schering Aktiengesellschaft Lipophilic metal complexes for necrosis and infarct imaging
US6495118B1 (en) 1997-09-26 2002-12-17 Schering Aktiengesellschaft Lipophilic metal complexes for necrosis and infarction imaging
WO1999043317A1 (en) * 1998-02-25 1999-09-02 Schering Aktiengesellschaft Necrosis-affine compounds and the utilization thereof in order to produce preparations for pharmacotherapy
WO2000005235A1 (en) * 1998-07-24 2000-02-03 Schering Aktiengesellschaft Paramagnetic 3-,8-substituted deuteroporphyrin derivatives, pharmaceutical preparations containing same, method for producing same and their use in magnetic resonance imaging of necrosis and infarction
US6056939A (en) * 1998-08-28 2000-05-02 Desreux; Jean F. Self-assembling heteropolymetallic chelates as imaging agents and radiopharmaceuticals
WO2004019936A1 (en) * 2002-08-27 2004-03-11 Schering Aktiengesellschaft Peroxynitrite rearrangement catalysts used for the treatment or prophylaxis of diseases caused by peroxynitrite-mediated reactions
US7341711B2 (en) 2004-03-12 2008-03-11 Guerbet Porphyrin compounds and their use in high-field MRI
WO2008033444A2 (en) * 2006-09-11 2008-03-20 Eukarion, Inc. Anti-apoptotic benzodiazepine receptor ligand inhibitors
WO2008033444A3 (en) * 2006-09-11 2008-09-18 Eukarion Inc Anti-apoptotic benzodiazepine receptor ligand inhibitors
WO2008095366A1 (en) * 2007-02-02 2008-08-14 Jinan Saiwen Pharmtechnology Inc. Porphyrin derivatives, preparation methods and the uses as small molecular antioxidant thereof
US8741262B2 (en) 2007-11-26 2014-06-03 Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, K.U. Leuven R&D Targeted radiotherapy

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