In vivo quantification of striatal dopamine D2 receptor occupancy by JNJ-37822681 using [11C]raclopride and positron emission tomography.

te Beek ET, de Boer P, Moerland M, Schmidt ME, Hoetjes NJ, Windhorst AD, van Berckel BN, Cohen AF, van Gerven JM, Lammertsma AA

JNJ-37822681 is a novel, fast-dissociating dopamine D(2) receptor antagonist, currently in development as an antipsychotic drug candidate. A previous first-in-human study demonstrated mild central nervous system effects of JNJ-37822681 in healthy male volunteers. Significant but transient serum prolactin elevations were demonstrated, whereas other neurophysiological effects were relatively small. To investigate striatal dopamine D(2) receptor occupancy by variable single doses of JNJ-37822681, an open-label [(11)C]raclopride positron emission tomography study was performed in 12 healthy male volunteers, using the simplified reference tissue model with cerebellum as reference tissue. Oral administration of JNJ-37822681 resulted in dose-dependent dopamine D(2) receptor occupancy. Receptor occupancy increased from 9-19% at 2 mg doses to 60-74% at 20 mg doses of JNJ-37822681. Therefore, single oral doses of JNJ-37822681 can produce occupancy levels that are generally associated with clinical efficacy for registered antipsychotic drugs.