Multi-Nuclide Dose Calibrator for PET Hot Cell Workflows
Product Introduction
The Multi-Nuclide Dose Calibrator is specifically optimized for PET
centers that handle multiple positron-emitting isotopes. PET
isotopes vary widely in half-life (F-18: 110 minutes, Ga-68: 68
minutes, Cu-64: 12.7 hours, Zr-89: 3.3 days) and emission energy
(annihilation radiation at 511 keV is common to all, but prompt
gamma emissions and positron branching ratios differ). Standard
dose calibrators treat all PET isotopes similarly, leading to
measurement errors for isotopes with complex decay schemes. This
instrument uses isotope-specific calibration factors derived from
Monte Carlo simulations and empirical measurements, achieving ±3%
accuracy for all common PET isotopes. The instrument includes
automated decay correction for each isotope, simplifying dose
preparation for time-delayed administrations.
Application Range
The Multi-Nuclide Dose Calibrator is designed for PET/CT
departments, cyclotron facilities, and radiopharmacies that produce
and dispense multiple PET tracers. Primary applications include
measuring F-18 FDG for oncology imaging, quantifying Ga-68 DOTATATE
for neuroendocrine tumor imaging, verifying Cu-64 tracers for PET
studies of copper metabolism, measuring Zr-89 immunoPET tracers for
antibody imaging, and quantifying Rb-82 for cardiac PET (when used
with a dedicated Rb-82 generator). The instrument supports both
single-dose measurements for patient-specific dosing and bulk
measurements for quality control of multi-dose vials.
Performance and Benefits
The Multi-Nuclide Dose Calibrator achieves ±3% accuracy for all
common PET isotopes — significantly better than standard
calibrators, which can produce errors of 10–20% for Ga-68 and Cu-64
due to their complex decay schemes. The improved accuracy is
achieved through isotope-specific calibration factors that account
for each isotope's unique emission spectrum. For Ga-68 (half-life
68 minutes), the calibrator uses a calibration factor that corrects
for the isotope's 89% positron branching ratio and the presence of
prompt gamma emissions at 1077 keV. For Cu-64 (12.7 hours), the
calibration corrects for the isotope's 19% positron branching, 40%
electron capture, and 41% beta-minus decay — a complex decay scheme
that confounds standard calibrators. For Zr-89 (3.3 days), the
calibration corrects for the isotope's 23% positron branching and
the presence of a 909 keV gamma. The instrument includes an
automated decay correction feature that is essential for PET
workflow. The user enters the desired administration time, and the
calibrator calculates the activity that must be present at the time
of measurement to deliver the prescribed dose at administration.
For short-lived isotopes like Ga-68 (68-minute half-life), a few
minutes' error in measurement or administration time can result in
a 5–10% dosing error. The instrument eliminates this calculation
error. The response time for PET isotopes is under 3 seconds for
typical patient doses (5–20 mCi), and the auto-ranging function
covers activities from 0.1 mCi to 2 Ci. The remote display unit
shows the measured activity, decay-corrected activity at
administration time, and time remaining until the dose decays below
the prescribed level. The instrument includes a data logging system
that stores up to 500 measurements with complete metadata, and the
USB port supports export to PET dose management software. An
optional printer produces labels for dose vials or syringes. For
PET centers, the primary benefit of the multi-nuclide design is
measurement accuracy across all isotopes used. As PET expands
beyond F-18 to include Ga-68, Cu-64, Zr-89, and others, the need
for isotope-specific calibration becomes critical. A center that
measures Ga-68 DOTATATE doses using an F-18 calibration factor will
consistently under-dose patients by 10–15% — a clinically
significant error. This instrument eliminates this risk by
providing correct calibration for every isotope. The automated
decay correction also reduces calculation errors and saves
technologist time. For PET centers that produce multiple tracers,
the Multi-Nuclide Dose Calibrator is an essential tool for ensuring
dose accuracy.