This study determined, using the intraarticular complete Freund adjuvant arthritis mice model, whether the radiotracer (99m)Tc-N-(triethylammonium)-3-propyl-[15]ane-N5 ((99m)Tc-NTP 15-5) targeting proteoglycans has a pathophysiologic validity for in vivo imaging of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and its response to chronic nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs.
Methods: We investigated the time course of cartilage remodeling by (99m)Tc-NTP 15-5 scintigraphy, bone damages by (99m)Tc-hydroxymethylene diphosphonate imaging, inflammation by (18)F-FDG PET, and joint proteoglycan content and pain behavior in animals, without and with meloxicam treatment. Paw circumference, thermal pain behavior, and histology as well as proteoglycan content of the whole joint were determined.
Results: (99m)Tc-NTP 15-5 showed specific tracer accumulation within RA joints, with a significant increase in scintigraphic ratio observed in RA versus shams from day 3 to day 28. (18)F-FDG evidenced uptake in RA joints from day 15 to day 29. Animals treated with meloxicam (5 mg/kg) exhibited a dose-dependent decrease in both (99m)Tc-NTP 15-5 and (18)F-FDG uptake ratios versus saline-treated animals. (99m)Tc-hydroxymethylene diphosphonate bone scans were only positive at day 14 in RA versus shams, with a significant effect of meloxicam. An increase in proteoglycans of RA joint and thermal pain behavior were observed and were dose-dependently reduced by meloxicam.
Conclusion: These experimental results bring data in favor of the (99m)Tc-NTP 15-5 radiotracer for assessing, in vivo, cartilage remodeling in RA that could be used to monitor therapy.
Keywords: 99mTc-NTP 15-5; proteoglycans; rheumatoid arthritis; scintigraphy.
© 2015 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, Inc.