Authors: Moskal, P.; Baran, J.; Bass, S.; Choinski, J.; Chug, N.; Curceanu, C.; Czerwinski, E.; Dadgar, M.; Das, M.; Dulski, K. Ł; Eliyan, K. V.; Fronczewska, K.; Gajos, A.; Kacprzak, K.; Kajetanowicz, M.; Kaplanoglu, T.; Kaplon, L.; Klimaszewski, K.; Kobylecka, M.; Korcyl, G.; Kozik, T.; Krzemien, W.; Kubat, K.; Kumar, D.; Kunikowska, J.; Maczewska, J.; Migdal, W.; Moskal, G.; Mryka, W.; Niedzwiecki, S.; Parzych, S.; Perez del Rio, E.; Raczynski, L.; Sharma, S.; Shivani, S.; Shopa, R. Y.; Silarski, M.; Skurzok, M.; Tayefi, F.; Tayefi, K.; Tanty, P.; Wislicki, W.; Krolicki, L.; Stepien, E. L.

Score: 1.5, Published: 2024-02-03

DOI: 10.1101/2024.02.01.23299028

Positronium, an unstable atom consisting of an electron and a positron, is abundantly produced within the molecular voids of a patients body during positron emission tomography (PET) diagnosis. Its properties, such as its average lifetime between formation and annihilation into photons, dynamically respond to the submolecular architecture of the tissue and the partial pressure of oxygen molecules. However, the diagnostic information that positronium may deliver about early molecular alterations remains unavailable in clinics with state-of-the-art PET scanners. This study presents the first in vivo images of positronium lifetime in humans. We developed a dedicated J-PET system with multiphoton detection capability for imaging. The measurements of positronium lifetime were performed on a patient with a glioblastoma tumor in the brain. The patient was injected intratumorally with the 68Ga radionuclide attached to Substance-P, which accumulates in glioma cells, and intravenously with 68Ga attached to the PSMA-11 ligand, which is selective to glioma cells and salivary glands. The 68Ga radionuclide is routinely used in PET for detecting radiopharmaceutical accumulation and was applied for positronium imaging because it can emit an additional prompt gamma. The prompt gamma enables the determination of the time of positronium formation, while the photons from positronium annihilation were used to reconstruct the place and time of its decay. The determined positronium mean lifetime in glioblastoma cells is shorter than in salivary glands, which in turn is shorter than in healthy brain tissues, demonstrating for the first time that positronium imaging can be used to diagnose disease in vivo. This study also demonstrates that if current total-body PET systems were equipped with multiphoton detection capability and the 44Sc radionuclide was applied, it would be possible to perform positronium imaging at 6500 times greater sensitivity than achieved in this research. Therefore, it is anticipated that positronium imaging has the potential to bring a new quality of cancer diagnosis in clinics.