FDA Label for Choline C 11

View Indications, Usage & Precautions

Choline C 11 Product Label

The following document was submitted to the FDA by the labeler of this product The University Of Texas Md Anderson Cancer Center. The document includes published materials associated whith this product with the essential scientific information about this product as well as other prescribing information. Product labels may durg indications and usage, generic names, contraindications, active ingredients, strength dosage, routes of administration, appearance, warnings, inactive ingredients, etc.

1 Indications And Usage



Choline C 11 Injection is indicated for positron emission tomography (PET) imaging of patients with suspected

prostate cancer recurrence and non-informative bone scintigraphy, computerized tomography (CT) or magnetic

resonance imaging (MRI). In these patients, 11C-choline PET imaging may help identify potential sites of

prostate cancer recurrence for subsequent histologic confirmation. Suspected prostate recurrence is based upon

elevated blood prostate specific antigen (PSA) levels following initial therapy. In clinical studies, images were

produced with PET/CT coregistration.

Limitation of Use:11C-choline PET imaging is not a replacement for histologic verification of recurrent

prostate cancer.


2.1 Radiation Safety - Drug Handling



Choline C 11 Injection is a radioactive drug and should be handled with appropriate safety measures to

minimize radiation exposure during administration. Use waterproof gloves and effective shielding when

handling Choline C 11 Injection. Radiopharmaceuticals, including Choline C 11 Injection, should only be used

by or under the control of physicians who are qualified by specific training and experience in the safe use and

handling of radioactive materials, and whose experience and training have been approved by the appropriate

governmental agency authorized to license the use of radionuclides.




The recommended dose is 370 – 740 MBq (10 – 20 mCi) administered as a bolus intravenous injection. The

radioactivity dose (370 – 740 MBq, 10 – 20 mCi) is chosen based on patient body dimensions and the

characteristics of the image acquisition system

  • Inspect Choline C 11 Injection visually for particulate matter and discoloration before administration. Do not use the drug if the solution contains particulate matter or is discolored.
  • Aseptically withdraw Choline C 11 Injection from its container and administer the drug as a bolus through a peripheral venous catheter.
  • Dispose of any unused drug in a safe manner, in compliance with applicable regulations.

2.3 Patient Preparation



Prior to administration of Choline C 11 Injection:

  • Fasting for at least six hours is recommended to minimize the potential for dietary choline interference with radioactivity uptake in tissue.
  • Ensure that the patient is well hydrated and encourage voiding when imaging is completed.

2.4 Radiation Dosimetry



The estimated radiation absorbed doses for adults from intravenous injection of Choline C 11 Injection are shown in Table 1.  These estimates are calculated from data in Tolvanen 1 and using OLINDA/EXM (Organ Level Internal Dose Assessment/Exponential Modeling) software from Vanderbilt University. 2


Other



Table 1:  Estimated Radiation Absorbed Dose Per Unit Activity for Adults, Choline C 11 Injection 
Organ/Tissue

Mean Absorbed Dose Per Unit 

Administered Activity (μGy/MBq) b

 Adrenals

3.59

 Bone - Osteogenic Cells4.81
 Bone - Red Marrow1.90
 Brain1.16
 Breast1.39
 Gallbladder Wall4.54
 GI a - Lower Large Intestine Wall 1.81

 GI a - Small Intestine

2.35
 GI a - Stomach Wall 6.00
 GI a - Upper Large Intestine Wall 6.41
 Heart wall3.43
 Kidneys20.62
 Liver20.11
 Lungs4.59
 Muscle2.54
 Ovaries2.02
 Pancreas29.19
 Skin1.22
 Spleen9.16
 Testes1.36
 Thymus1.69
 Thyroid1.49
 Urinary Bladder Wall3.41
 Uterus1.96
 Total Body2.97
 Effective Dose (µSv/MBq) c4.35


2.5 Imaging Guidelines



  • Initiate image acquisition immediately after administration of Choline C 11 Injection. Imaging is typically performed from the base of the pelvis to the base of the skull.
  • Acquire static emission images 0 to 15 minutes from the time of injection.
  • Localized uptake of 11 C-choline in a site suspicious for prostate cancer recurrence (a positive image) is determined by comparison of the anatomical relationship of concentrated radioactivity to the neighboring tissue background, exclusive of the radioactivity physiologically accumulated within the pancreas, liver, spleen, kidney and colon.

3  Dosage Forms And Strengths



Choline C 11 Injection contains 148 MBq to 3,700 MBq (4 mCi to 100 mCi) per milliliter of 11C-choline at End of Synthesis (EOS) calibration time in aqueous 0.9% sodium chloride solution (approximately 10 mL volume).


4  Contraindications



None


5 Warnings And Precautions




5.1 Imaging Errors



Imaging errors have been reported with 11C-choline PET and PET/CT imaging. A negative image does not rule

out the presence of recurrent prostate cancer and a positive image does not confirm the presence of recurrent

cancer.   11C-choline uptake is not specific for prostate cancer and may occur with other types of cancer (such as

lung carcinoma and brain tumors). Clinical correlation, including histopathological evaluation of the suspected

recurrence site, is essential to proper use of the PET imaging information.

  • Blood PSA levels < 2 ng/mL have been associated with poor performance of 11C-choline PET imaging (higher numbers of false positive and false negative results) [ see Clinical Studies (14)].
  • Tissue inflammation as well as prostatic hyperplasia have been associated with false positive 11C-choline PET images.
  • Concomitant colchicine or androgen-deprivation therapeutic drugs (such as luteinizing hormone-releasing analogs and anti-androgen drugs) may interfere with 11C-choline PET imaging. One published report of 18F-methylcholine PET imaging indicated that discontinuation of colchicine for two weeks resolved the colchicine effect. The impact of discontinuation of androgen-deprivation therapy upon 11C-choline PET imaging has not been established [ see Drug Interactions (7)].

5.2 Allergic Reactions



As with any injectable drug product, allergic reactions and anaphylaxis may occur. Emergency resuscitation equipment and personnel should be immediately available.


5.3 Radiation Risks



Choline C 11 Injection contributes to a patient’s overall long-term cumulative radiation exposure. Long- term cumulative radiation exposure is associated with an increased risk for cancer. Safe handling should be ensured to minimize radiation exposure to the patient and health care workers [ see Dosage and Administration (2.1)] .


6 Adverse Reactions



Exclusive of an uncommon, mild injection site reaction, no adverse reactions to 11C-Choline have been reported.


7 Drug Interactions



Colchicine and androgen-deprivation therapeutic drugs have been reported to interfere with choline-based PET imaging [ see Warnings and Precautions (5.1)].

The impact of androgen-deprivation therapeutic drugs upon 11C-choline PET imaging may depend upon the  hormonal responsiveness of a patient’s recurrent prostate cancer. Clinical studies have not established this relationship but published reports suggest 11C-choline PET imaging may be productive in patients with“hormone resistant” recurrent prostate cancer even if the patients are receiving anti-androgen therapy. Imaging may prove unproductive or misleading due to failed or insufficient 11C-choline uptake in patients with hormone-responsive cancer if the patients are receiving androgen-deprivation therapy.


8.1 Pregnancy



Pregnancy Category C.

There are no adequate and well controlled studies with Choline C 11 Injection in pregnant women and the fetal radiation dose from a 11C-choline PET imaging study is unknown. It is not known whether Choline C 11 Injection can cause fetal harm when administered to a pregnant woman or can affect reproduction capacity. Animal reproduction studies have not been conducted with 11C-choline.

All radiopharmaceuticals, including Choline C 11 Injection, have a potential to cause fetal harm. The likelihood of fetal harm depends on the stage of fetal development and the magnitude of the radiopharmaceutical dose. Assess pregnancy status before administering Choline C 11 Injection to a female of child bearing potential. Choline C 11 Injection should be given to a pregnant woman only if clearly needed.


8.3 Nursing Mothers



Choline C 11 Injection is not indicated for use in women. It is not known whether Choline C 11 Injection is excreted in human milk. Because many drugs are excreted in human milk and because of the potential for radiation exposure to nursing infants from Choline C 11 Injection, nursing mothers should use alternative infant nutrition sources (e.g., stored breast milk or infant formula) and pump and discard breast milk for 8 hours (>10 half-lives of radioactive decay for 11C isotope) after administration of the drug or avoid use of the drug, taking into account the importance of the drug to the mother.


8.4 Pediatric Use



The safety and effectiveness of Choline C 11 Injection have not been established in pediatric patients.


11.1 Chemical Characteristics



Choline C 11 Injection is a positron emitting radiopharmaceutical that is used for diagnostic purposes in conjunction with PET imaging. The active ingredient, 11C-choline, has the molecular formula of  C4 11CH 14NOCl with a molecular weight of 138.63 g and has the following chemical structure:

Choline C 11 Injection is provided as a ready to use sterile, pyrogen-free, clear and colorless solution.  Each milliliter contains 148 MBq to 3,700 MBq (4 mCi - 100 mCi) of 11C-choline at EOS calibration time in aqueous 0.9% sodium chloride solution.  The pH of the solution is between 4.5 and 8.0. 


11.2 Physical Characteristics



Carbon 11 is a cyclotron-produced radionuclide that decays to Boron 11 by positron emission and has a physical half-life of 20.4 minutes (Table 2).

Table 2: Principal Radiation Emission Data for 11C

*Produced by positron annihilation


12.1  Mechanism Of Action



Choline C 11 Injection is a radiolabeled analog of choline, a precursor molecule essential for the  biosynthesis of cell membrane phospholipids. Choline is involved in synthesis of the structural components of cell membranes, as well as modulation of trans-membrane signaling. Increased phospholipid synthesis (i.e., increased uptake of choline) has been associated with cell proliferation and the transformation process that occurs in tumor cells.


12.2  Pharmacodynamics



In a study of men with prostatic hyperplasia or primary prostate cancer, PET imaging showed 11C- choline  radioactivity accumulated rapidly within the prostate; uptake appeared to peak by five minutes following injection of the drug and activity was retained over the subsequent 30 minute scanning period. Little uptake was observed in the bladder and rectum.


12.3  Pharmacokinetics



Distribution:  11C-choline distributes mainly to the pancreas, kidneys, liver, spleen and colon [ see Dosage and Administration (2.4)].  Based upon the relatively low urinary excretion of radioactivity, renal distribution is predominantly to the organ itself, rather than via formation of urine.

Metabolism: Following intravenous administration, 11C-choline undergoes metabolism resulting in the  detection of 11C-betaine as the major metabolite in blood. In a study of patients with prostate cancer or brain disorders, the fractional activities of 11C-choline and 11C-betaine in human arterial plasma appeared to reach a plateau within 25 minutes, with 11C-betaine representing 82% ± 9% of the total 11C detected at that time point. A small amount of unmetabolized 11C-choline was detected within the blood at the final sampling time point (40 minutes).

Elimination: Urinary excretion of 11C-choline was < 2% of the injected radioactivity at 1.5 hours after  injection of the drug. The rate of 11C-choline excretion in urine was 0.014 mL/min.


13.1 Carcinogenesis, Mutagenesis, Impairment Of Fertility



Long term studies have not been performed to evaluate the carcinogenic potential of Choline C 11  Injection. The mutagenic potential of Choline C 11 Injection has not been adequately evaluated; however, any radiopharmaceutical, including Choline C 11 Injection, has the potential to be mutagenic. The effect of Choline C 11 Injection on fertility has not been evaluated.


14  Clinical Studies



A systematic review of published reports identified four studies that contained data sufficient to compare  11C-choline PET imaging to histopathology (truth standard) among patients with suspected prostate cancer recurrence and non-informative conventional imaging (for most patients, CT or MRI). In general, the suspected recurrence criteria consisted of at least two sequential PSA levels of > 0.2 ng/mL for men who had undergone prostatectomy and PSA levels of ≥ 2 ng/mL above the post-therapy nadir for men who had undergone radiotherapy. The studies were predominantly single clinical site experiences and image acquisition generally surveyed radioactivity distribution from the base of the pelvis to the base of the skull.

Prospective studies: Two studies examined the ability of 11C-choline PET/CT to detect prostate cancer in  pelvic and/or retroperitoneal lymph nodes among patients who had previously undergone radical prostatectomy. Both studies used a truth standard of lymph node histopathology. 11C-choline images were interpreted by readers masked to clinical information; surgical resection of lymph nodes was performed by surgeons aware of the 11C-choline PET/CT results.

In Study One 3, 25 patients who underwent 11C-choline PET/CT and conventional imaging (CT or MRI)  were scheduled to undergo pelvic or pelvic plus retroperitoneal lymphadenectomy following the imaging identification of suspected lymph node metastases. The median PSA was 2.0 ng/mL (range 0.2 to 23.1 ng/mL). The study excluded subjects with metastatic disease detected by bone scintigraphy or isolated prostatic fossa recurrence. Among the 25 patients, 21 had positive 11C-choline PET/CT scans; histopathology verified cancer in 19 of these patients. Lymph node histopathology detected no cancer among the four patients who had surgery based only on positive conventional imaging; 11C-choline PET/CT was negative in all four patients. The study report included information for patients who had non-informative conventional imaging (CT or MRI, bone scintigraphy and transrectal ultrasound), as shown in Table 5.

In Study Two 4, 15 patients were scheduled to undergo pelvic or pelvis plus retroperitoneal  lymphadenectomy solely based upon positive 11C-choline PET/CT imaging in the setting of negative conventional imaging (ultrasound and/or CT and/or MRI and/or bone scintigraphy). The median PSA was 2.0 ng/mL (range 1.0 to 8.0 ng/mL); all patients had previously undergone radical prostatectomy. Eight of the 15 patients had cancer verified by lymph node histology; histology detected no cancer in seven patients.

Retrospective Studies: Two studies were retrospective reviews of patients who underwent 11C-choline  PET/CT and had histopathology obtained from biopsy of the prostatic fossa or other suspected recurrence sites.

In Study Three 5, 11C-choline PET/CT imaging was performed among 36 patients with suspected prostate  cancer recurrence and 13 subjects without suspected recurrence (controls). Prostatic fossa biopsies were performed among the patients with suspected recurrence. All the patients and control subjects had previously undergone radical prostatectomy; patient with suspected recurrence had no evidence of cancer using conventional clinical evaluations, including trans-rectal ultrasound and bone scintigraphy. PET/CT scans were interpreted by readers masked to clinical information. Median PSA was 2.0 ng/mL (range 0.3 – 12.1 ng/mL) for patients with suspected recurrence and 0.1 ng/mL (range 0.0 – 0.2 ng/mL) in control subjects. Prostatic fossa biopsy showed cancer in 33 of the 36 patients with suspected recurrence. PET/CT scans were positive in 25 of the 36 patients; two patients had false positive scans (one scan in a control subject and one scan in a suspected recurrence subject who had no cancer detected on prostatic fossa biopsy). Among the 13 control subjects, 12 had negative PET/CT scans.

In Study Four 6,7, 34 patients with negative conventional imaging underwent 11C-choline PET/CT and  subsequently had biopsies of suspected recurrence sites. The median PSA level of the 34 patients was 3.9 ng/mL (range 0.2 to 65.0 ng/mL); 22 of the patients had previously undergone radical prostatectomy and 12 had received other therapy (radiotherapy, anti-androgen therapy or cryotherapy). 11C-choline PET/CT images were positive in 30 patients and negative in four patients. Cancer was verified by histopathology in 29 patients; 25 had positive PET/CT images and four had negative PET/CT images. Five patients with positive PET/CT images did not have cancer confirmed with histopathology.

As shown in Table 5, within each study at least half the patients with non-informative conventional  imaging had positive 11C-choline PET/CT images and histologically verified recurrent prostate cancer.


15 References



     1Tolvanen T, Yli-Kerttula T, Ujula T, Autio A, Lehikoinen P, Minn J, RoivinenA; Biodistribution and  radiation dosimetry of [ 11C] choline: a comparison between rat and human data. Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging. 2010; 37:874-83.

     2OLINDA/EXM software, Version 1.1. Vanderbilt University, 2007.

     3Scattoni V, Picchio M, Suardi N, Messa C, Freschi M, Roscigno M, Da Pozzo L, Bocciardi A, Rigatti P,  Fazio F. Detection of lymph-node metastases with integrated [ 11C]choline PET/CT in patients with PSA failure after radical retropubic prostatectomy: results confirmed by open pelvic retroperitoneal lymphadenectomy.  Eur Urol. 2007; 52:423-9.

     4Rinnab L, Mottaghy FM, Simon J, Volkmer BG, de Petriconi R, Hautmann RE, Wittbrodt M, Egghart G,  Moeller P, Blumstein N, Resks S, Kuefer R. [ 11C]choline PET/CT for targeted salvage lymph node dissection in patients with biochemical recurrence after primary curative therapy for prostate cancer. Urologia Int. 2008; 81:191-7.

     5Reske SN, Blumstein NM, Glatting G. [ 11C]choline PET/CT imaging in occult local relapse of prostate  cancer after radical prostatectomy. Eur J Med Mol Imaging. 2008; 35:9-17.

     6Mitchell C, Kwon E, Lowe V, Hung J, Rangel L, Karnes RJ. Impact of 11C-choline PET/CT scan on  detection of recurrent prostate cancer in men with biochemical recurrence following failed initial treatment; supplemented with subject-level data. J Urol. 2012; 187:e823.

     7Mitchell C, Kwon E, Lowe V, Hung J, Rangel L, Karnes RJ. Detection of consolidated disease recurrences  of prostate cancer by 11C-choline PET/Scan: results confirmed by surgical resection; supplemented with subject-level data. J Urol. 2012; 187:e823.


16.1 How Supplied



Choline C 11 Injection is packaged in a glass vial containing between 148 MBq to 3,700 MBq (4 mCi to 100 mCi) of 11C-choline at EOS calibration time in aqueous 0.9% sodium chloride solution (approximately 10 mL volume).


16.2 Storage And Handling



Store Choline C 11 Injection at 25°C (77°F); excursions permitted to 15 to 30°C (59 to 86°F) (see USP Controlled Room Temperature). Use the solution within 90 minutes of EOS calibration.


17 Patient Counseling Information



  • Instruct patients to drink plenty of water or other fluids (as tolerated) in the four hours before their PET/CT study.
  • Instruct patients to void after completion of each image acquisition session and as often as possible for one hour after the PET/CT scan ends.

Manufactured By:



The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

Cyclotron Radiochemistry Facility (CRF)

1881 East Road

Houston, TX  77054


Distributed By:



The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

Cyclotron Radiochemistry Facility (CRF)

1881 East Road

Houston, TX  77054


Principal Display Panel



NDC# 60215-111-10

Choline C 11 Injection

For Intravenous Use Rx Only


* Please review the disclaimer below.