DDG-MRI (101185775)

  https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101185775

  Horizon Europe (2021-2027)

  DDG-MRI for cancer detection - A novel medical imaging approach that correlates to FDG-PET without ionising radiation

  EIC Pathfinder Open (HORIZON-EIC-2024-PATHFINDEROPEN-01-01)

  oncology  ·  magnetic resonance imaging

  2024-12-01 Start Date (YY-MM-DD)

  2027-11-30 End Date (YY-MM-DD)

  € 2,991,061 Total Cost


  Description

Positron emission tomography (PET) measurements of 2-deoxy-2-[18F]fluoro-D-glucose (FDG) uptake have been widely used clinically for tumour staging, prognosis, and treatment monitoring, where it can be more sensitive at detecting treatment response than magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computerised tomography (CT) -based evaluations of tumour size. 2-deoxy-D-glucose (DG) and FDG are non-metabolisable derivatives of D-glucose that get trapped in the cells of active or malignant tissues. Even though highly sensitive, the ionising radiation associated with FDG-PET limits its frequent application (typically not more than 2-3 examinations per year) and its use in populations such as children and pregnant women, who may otherwise benefit from this valuable and unique diagnostic imaging examination. As such, alternative techniques are highly demanded. The DDG-MRI project aims at providing the benefits of FDG-PET without ionising radiation. We propose an MRI-based imaging agent and technique that will provide PET-like images with MRI without ionising radiation. To this end, we will make use of 1) a novel DG analogue that is uniformly labelled with deuterons ([D8]2-deoxy-D-glucose) and 2) rapid and sensitive deuterium MRI schemes targeted at demonstrating the uptake of this agent in malignant tissues further to intravenous administration. The expected spatial resolution will exceed that of FDG-PET (~2-3 mm in plane) in a scan time of about 2 min, with a clinically acceptable and commercially relevant dose of the labelled compound. DDG-MRI is likely to be quickly adopted by medical centres as it does not require significant hardware changes, does not change the MRI suite workflow, and is expected to cost the same as a PET scan. This consortium comprises six partners (two from industry) from five countries, enthusiastic about making DDG-MRI a medical reality for cancer detection and treatment monitoring.


  Complicit Organisations

1 Israeli organisation participates in DDG-MRI.

Country Organisation (ID) VAT Number Role Activity Type Total Cost EC Contribution Net EC Contribution
Germany GE HEALTHCARE GMBH (884276251) DE238938711 thirdParty PRC € 0 € 0 € 138,472
Germany UNIVERSITAET ULM (999882209) DE173703203 participant HES € 496,875 € 496,875 € 496,875
France CORTECNET (951881759) FR14402792048 participant PRC € 500,000 € 500,000 € 500,000
Italy UNIVERSITA DEGLI STUDI DI TORINO (999861936) IT02099550010 participant HES € 499,676 € 499,676 € 499,676
Israel HADASSAH MEDICAL ORGANIZATION (998738191) IL520008095 coordinator HES € 500,000 € 500,000 € 500,000
Denmark DANMARKS TEKNISKE UNIVERSITET (999990655) DK30060946 participant HES € 494,497 € 494,497 € 494,497
United Kingdom GE HEALTHCARE LIMITED (999592858) GB578438784 participant PRC € 500,012 € 500,012 € 361,540