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1 regard to transduction efficiency and vector biodistribution.
2 ce of EVs to investigate their half-life and biodistribution.
3 short circulatory half-life and inefficient biodistribution.
4 muCi) of (18)F-FES was also used for tissue biodistribution.
5 ug plasma concentrations and improved tissue biodistribution.
6 ties and is likely to affect trafficking and biodistribution.
7 e in target tissues was confirmed by ex vivo biodistribution.
8 e were tested for maximum tolerated dose and biodistribution.
9 e apparent drug half-life and improve tissue biodistribution.
10 , T(1/2)=5.6days), allow the imaging of this biodistribution.
11 of human were calculated based on the mouse biodistribution.
12 e changes in size may alter their uptake and biodistribution.
13 r understanding their cellular targeting and biodistribution.
14 Dose calculations were based on a known biodistribution.
15 ivity on interaction with PSMA and hence the biodistribution.
16 affinity, avidity, target specificities, and biodistribution.
17 tion dose, (177)Lu-PP-F11N shows a promising biodistribution.
18 environment and the lack of data about their biodistributions.
26 marrow biopsy measurements to ascertain the biodistribution and biokinetics of the radiolabeled anti
29 Herein, we report fundamental changes in biodistribution and brain bioavailability of macrophage-
30 nockout and wildtype rats as well as in vivo biodistribution and brain PET imaging studies in wildtyp
32 nomers can be used to manipulate the in vivo biodistribution and clearance rate of polyethylene glyco
33 e daratumumab does not bind the murine CD38, biodistribution and dose-range finding were also determi
36 s Daratumumab does not bind the murine CD38, biodistribution and DRF were also determined using an an
38 rhDNase in the lungs and to elucidate their biodistribution and elimination pathways after intratrac
40 invasive whole-body imaging with organ-level biodistribution and fluorescence image-guided identifica
41 nti-viral activity, assessment of the drug's biodistribution and kinetics in vivo may lend insight in
50 nitor chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell biodistribution and proliferation harbor the potential t
51 ase 0 imaging trial examined the (18)F-FdCyd biodistribution and radiation dosimetry in 5 human subje
54 okinetic properties, such as kidney-specific biodistribution and rapid renal excretion (>80% injected
56 e formulation, it is possible to improve the biodistribution and safety of a given therapeutic payloa
57 nally, we determined MTP(10)-HDL's favorable biodistribution and safety profile in non-human primates
65 )Zr-antibody PET imaging to measure antibody biodistribution and tissue pharmacokinetics is well esta
67 es were collected to evaluate ex vivo tracer biodistribution and to perform flow cytometric, Western
68 ts therapeutic potential was hampered by its biodistribution and toxicity to normal tissues, specific
70 g antibody demonstrated starkly differential biodistribution and tumor accumulation properties, with
74 r (HER3) mAb GSK2849330, we investigated the biodistribution and tumor uptake of (89)Zr-labeled GSK28
77 The secondary aim was to depict the tracer biodistribution and tumor-to-background ratios (TBRs) in
79 leading to an in-depth understanding of drug biodistribution and, in turn, shedding light on ways to
82 (99m)Tc, we performed in vivo SPECT imaging, biodistribution, and fluorescence imaging on BALB/c nude
85 strated by in vitro autoradiography, ex vivo biodistribution, and positron emission tomography (PET).
86 purpose of this study was to assess safety, biodistribution, and radiation dosimetry in humans for t
87 rst-in-humans study investigated the safety, biodistribution, and radiation dosimetry of a novel (18)
88 study investigated the safety, tolerability, biodistribution, and radiation dosimetry of this radioph
89 OvCa xenografts by dynamic PET/MRI, ex vivo biodistribution, and radiometabolite analysis of plasma
90 body responses and IFN-gamma production) and biodistribution (antigen and adjuvant) were evaluated in
95 0-fold and 50-fold excess of 5D3 followed by biodistribution at 24 h to determine PSMA binding specif
97 sight into the effect of AuNP size on animal biodistribution at CT dose levels, which has not previou
100 o studies were conducted to characterize the biodistribution, blood circulation time, neutralizing an
102 xtended the circulation time and changed the biodistribution compared to the non-liposomal radiopepti
103 binding affinity to Abeta42 and higher brain biodistribution compared with its enantiomer L3.3, givin
105 ates that toxicity, NA binding capacity, and biodistribution could be balanced to achieve maximum the
107 diation dosimetry was calculated using mouse biodistribution data and blood clearance kinetics from S
113 ng the positron-emitting (132)La and ex vivo biodistribution data separately corroborated the accumul
117 doses were calculated on the basis of murine biodistribution data, which were translated to a human a
120 ocess, involving expression level (Bmax) and biodistribution determination, a PET-specific structure-
121 opeptide in vivo, although interestingly the biodistribution did not resemble that of liposome constr
122 ctive of this study was to assess the tracer biodistribution, dosimetry and quantitative methods of (
123 e main objectives were evaluation of safety, biodistribution, dosimetry, and preliminary tumor target
124 ctive of this study was to assess the tracer biodistribution, dosimetry, and quantitative methods of
125 is first-in-humans study was to evaluate the biodistribution, dosimetry, and safety of the HER2-speci
126 his preclinical evaluation was to assess the biodistribution, dosimetry, and therapeutic efficacy of
132 of a label at the C terminus yields the best biodistribution features for both radiometal and radioha
133 roviding a convenient method for determining biodistribution following intravenous administration in
134 gate the effect of formulation on paclitaxel biodistribution following intravenous administration in
136 ions, it will be necessary to evaluate their biodistribution for health and safety considerations.
139 otoxicity, controllable pharmacokinetics and biodistribution, have shown promising results for renal
141 unoconjugates with (89)Zr and explored their biodistribution in athymic nude, NSG, and humanized NSG
142 licity to provide a PET ligand with improved biodistribution in comparison with previously published
146 of [(18)F]favipiravir was developed and the biodistribution in mice naive to and pre-dosed with favi
150 ormulation with vaccine antigen, undesirable biodistribution in vital organs, or unknown long-term to
152 lay heightened plasma exposure, reduction in biodistribution into major organs and enhanced tumor exp
153 Conclusion: [(89)Zr]Zr-DFO-N-suc-muS110 biodistribution is dependent mainly on the T-cell-target
154 ging agents, and characterizing nanoparticle biodistribution is essential for evaluating their effica
156 RNA from nucleases, cellular uptake, in vivo biodistribution, larval mortality and gene knockdown eff
157 e was evaluated on the basis of the expected biodistribution, lesion detection rate, and physiologic
158 vitro autoradiography, PET imaging, ex vivo biodistribution, metabolite experiments, and receptor oc
159 non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) and compared the biodistribution of (11)C-MET PET/CT with that of (18)F-F
163 : No statistically significant difference in biodistribution of (177)Lu was observed between the grou
166 st-in-humans radiation dosimetry results and biodistribution of (18)F-FdCyd, administered along with
171 mical synthesis, cell uptake, cell kill, and biodistribution of (213)Bi-L1 and (225)Ac-L1 were evalua
181 disposition, the pharmacokinetics (PK), and biodistribution of acetaminophen were assessed in C57Bl/
190 athecally delivered antisense drugs, and the biodistribution of intrathecal dosed antisense drugs.
193 escribed a prodrug strategy that directs the biodistribution of parent drug nuclear receptor modulato
194 (100 micrograms) resulted in broad bilateral biodistribution of rhBeta-Gal to critical regions of pat
195 ta-gal (100 mug) resulted in broad bilateral biodistribution of rhbeta-gal to critical regions of pat
196 ke protein binding to the ACE2 receptor, and biodistribution of SARS-CoV-2 targeting antibodies to th
200 , which predicts the tumor vs. normal tissue biodistribution of the most studied pHLIP, "wild-type pH
209 ole-body counts, to determine safety, tracer biodistribution, pharmacokinetics, and radiation dosimet
211 ) in a random crossover sequence to evaluate biodistribution, pharmacokinetics, and tumor and organ d
212 erformed three substudies to investigate the biodistribution, potential for imaging arthritis and kin
213 3-Nano were synthesized to study the in vivo biodistribution profile of the liposome and GT3 individu
214 ng (PC-3) mice revealed two compounds with a biodistribution profile superior to that of [(18)F]fluor
215 -NT(7-13) as the one with the most promising biodistribution profile, characterized by high tumor upt
219 C-102 has previously shown favorable in vivo biodistribution properties in mouse models of CAIX-posit
220 nation of photophysical, physiochemical, and biodistribution properties that greatly enhance bioimagi
221 I study was aimed at evaluating the safety, biodistribution, radiation dosimetry, and tumor-imaging
222 ormed in Wistar rats comprising PET imaging, biodistribution, receptor occupancy, and metabolites stu
227 lecules are disadvantaged by a less confined biodistribution, shorter circulatory half-life, and inab
230 )Cu-NOTA-PEG4-cRGD2 demonstrated a favorable biodistribution, slow washout, and excellent performance
231 opic breast tumors for in vivo SPECT/MRI and biodistribution studies after injection with (177)Lu-DOT
232 scent cell and PET based in vivo imaging and biodistribution studies and demonstrated that plant deri
233 ab')(2) antigal-3 was performed, followed by biodistribution studies and immunohistochemical analysis
241 thesized and evaluated by PET/CT imaging and biodistribution studies in LNCaP tumor-bearing mice.
242 177)Lu and evaluated by SPECT/CT imaging and biodistribution studies in LNCaP tumor-bearing mice.
245 sitron emission tomography (PET) imaging and biodistribution studies in multiple xenograft models and
247 se findings highlight the need for extensive biodistribution studies of novel bispecific constructs,
263 ro performance, small-animal PET imaging and biodistribution studies were performed on HT-1080-FAP tu
278 n should yield images that are comparable in biodistribution to conventional clinical images acquired
280 m of primary brain cancer, by enhancing drug biodistribution to the tumor and avoiding systemic toxic
281 ve small-animal SPECT/CT imaging and ex vivo biodistribution to understand the in vivo behavior of PE
282 adiopharmaceutical that demonstrates similar biodistribution to urea-based PSMA-targeted agents, with
283 e model organism for therapeutic assessment, biodistribution tracking, and the controlled release of
284 e slow clearance from circulation and tissue biodistribution typical of PEGylated nanoparticles.
285 ce by small-animal PET/CT imaging and tissue biodistribution using 5.55 MBq (150 muCi) of (18)F-FES.
290 jection of (68)Ga-DOTA-Siglec-9 was safe and biodistribution was favorable for testing of the tracer
296 analysis, which was corroborated by ex vivo biodistribution, were used to estimate the dosimetry of
297 ns of extrapolation to pre-clinical or human biodistribution with cellular level resolution for NMs s
298 flubrobenguane showed a reproducible, stable biodistribution, with the highest SUV(max) and SUV(mean)