Radiopharmaceuticals combine chemistry, biology and nuclear physics to diagnose and treat various medical conditions. While they’ve existed for over a century, scientific advancement is bringing them back into the spotlight.

Understanding radiopharmaceuticals

Radiopharmaceuticals are comprised of three primary components.1

This structure allows for a highly versatile and customizable product used for different diagnostic and therapeutic applications.

Developed to Find, Fight and Follow® disease

Radiopharmaceuticals are multi-use tools that enable healthcare professionals (HCPs) to support patient care across the entire journey—from diagnosing and staging diseases like cancer or Alzheimer’s disease, to targeting and treating a wide array of tumor types—making them a versatile modality to help improve patient outcomes.

Diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals

These are primarily used in imaging tests to visualize disease. For example, positron emission tomography (PET) scans often use Fluorine-18 (18F).5 18F is a positron-emitting radioisotope of fluorine with a half-life of approximately 110 minutes. It is produced in a cyclotron and is commonly used to label biologically active molecules for diagnostic imaging in oncology, neurology and cardiology. 

Therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals

These seek out and bind to cancer cells to deliver a high dose of radiation directly to the tumor while minimizing damage to surrounding healthy tissue. For example, Lutetium-177 (177Lu) is a radioactive isotope of lutetium used in targeted radionuclide therapy for treatment of certain types of cancers. 177Lu is a beta emitter, meaning it emits beta particles that can damage and kill cancer cells.

Theranostic pairs

These combine diagnostic and therapeutic capabilities in a matched pair, using the same or similar targeting molecules to first locate disease and then treat it. For example, a diagnostic scan might use 18F to identify tumors, followed by treatment with 177Lu while targeting the same tumor marker—allowing for personalized, targeted care.

Value and impact on patient outcomes

Radiopharmaceuticals offer several benefits to deliver better patient outcomes6:

Precision in diagnosis and treatment

Radiopharmaceuticals provide accurate diagnostic information, potentially enabling timely and effective treatment interventions of diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular diseases and neurological disorders.

Minimally invasive

Unlike traditional surgical methods, radiopharmaceuticals offer a non-invasive or minimally invasive alternative for both diagnosis and treatment. This can potentially reduce the risk of complications and shorten recovery times. 

Superior diagnostic performance

Radiopharmaceuticals offer functional and molecular-level imaging that goes beyond the anatomical detail provided by traditional imaging methods like X-rays or bone scans for potentially more accurate detection of disease.

By harnessing the power of radioactive isotopes, radiopharmaceuticals are not just transforming molecular imaging and treatment—they are paving the way for the next generation of precision medicines that will enable HCPs to better Find, Fight and Follow® disease to deliver better patient outcomes.

References


1. The Chemical Scaffold of Theranostic Radiopharmaceuticals: Radionuclide, Bifunctional Chelator, and Pharmacokinetics Modifying Linker. National Library of Medicine. Published May 10, 2022. Accessed May 21, 2025. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35630536/ 2. Gamma Radiation: Its Discovery, Applications, and Safety Considerations. Open MedScience. Published July 2, 2024. Accessed May 21, 2025. https://openmedscience.com/gamma-radiation-its-discovery-applications-and-safety-considerations/ 3. Beta Particle. Nuclear Power. Accessed May 21, 2025. https://www.nuclear-power.com/nuclear-power/reactor-physics/atomic-nuclear-physics/fundamental-particles/beta-particle/ 4. Properties of Radioactive Isotopes: An Overview. U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Published February 22, 2024. Accessed May 21, 2025. https://www.cdc.gov/radiation-health/about/radioactive-isotopes.html 5. Production and Quality Control of Fluorine-18 Labelled Radiopharmaceuticals. International Atomic Energy Agency. Published 2021. Accessed May 21, 2025. https://www.iaea.org/publications/14925/production-and-quality-control-of-fluorine-18-labelled-radiopharmaceuticals  6. Radiopharmaceuticals: Navigating the Frontier of Precision Medicine and Therapeutic Innovation. National Library of Medicine. Published January 5, 2024. Accessed May 21, 2025. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38183131/

Lantheus Luminaries offers a closer look at the people and processes that make our purpose to Find, Fight and Follow® disease possible. 

Meet Paul L., Research Investigator

Our commitment to improving patient outcomes is keenly felt in our labs, where Lantheus products are developed, optimized and validated. Throughout that process, the safety of patients falls directly in the hands of medical lab team members like Paul L., a Research Investigator.

A key skill for success is to be able to communicate and pivot if needed. It allows us to execute impactful, complex and time-sensitive research.

Paul began working in life sciences while pursuing a PhD at Tufts University. With a background in material science and analytical chemistry, a career focused on advancements to improve efficiency of cancer radiotherapy was a natural transition. Paul joined the Lantheus team in 2023 and quickly became an integral part of our daily lab work.

An essential role in patient safety

For Paul, a typical day revolves around providing essential analytical support to our Process Development team. This team is responsible for synthesizing batches of a drug product, and Paul’s team then analyzes those products to determine if those synthetic process modifications have improved the products’ quality and stability. In short, the specifics of Paul’s role can vary, but at its core, their function is to ensure patient safety.

Collaboration is critical in this task. Paul’s team works closely—and quickly—together. Due to the half-life of radioisotopes, the window they have to work with drug products is very narrow. To gain an accurate understanding of whether an experiment was successful, they often have a matter of minutes. 

Beyond the lab, Paul engages with Lantheus’ global manufacturing network as a subject matter expert (SME), ensuring the smooth implementation of new analytical processes for quality control testing.

Personal and professional motivations

At every step of the way, Paul is motivated by the same purpose that drives each of us on the Lantheus team. Paul has lost several family members to cancer and Alzheimer’s and knows firsthand how devastating these diseases are for patients and their families. As Paul puts it, knowing their work helps safely provide diagnostic information to patients is what gets them out of bed every day.

Supporting the commercialization of two Alzheimer’s diagnostic agents is the most rewarding scientific effort I’ve been a part of.

While this work fulfills Paul’s personal and professional motivations to advance science, they find time outside of the lab to flex the creative side of their brain. Paul spends much of their time cooking and baking sourdough bread with their partner, Nick, or tending to their 70+ houseplants and ever-expanding garden.

Additionally, one of Paul’s favorite pastimes is exploring their practice in the yoga studio. Paul has found that investing time and energy into oneself and the important people in one’s life can help keep things in perspective. 

Paul has tapped into something that is true for each of us on the Lantheus team: maintaining perspective is crucial. When we enjoy our own personal time and relationships, we’re reminded of how our work impacts patients’ ability to do the same.

Paul’s dedication to our work, mirrored by countless others in our labs, underscores the vital role that R&D professionals play in bringing our purpose to life.