| Literature DB >> 28322082 |
Masato Kobayashi1, Teresa Jiang1, Sanjay Telu1, Sami S Zoghbi1, Roger N Gunn2,3, Eugenii A Rabiner2, David R Owen3, Qi Guo2, Victor W Pike1, Robert B Innis1, Masahiro Fujita1.
Abstract
Positron emission tomography (PET) radioligands for translocator protein 18 kDa (TSPO) are widely used to measure neuroinflammation, but controversy exists whether second-generation radioligands are superior to the prototypical agent 11C-( R)-PK11195 in human imaging. This study sought to quantitatively measure the "signal to background" ratio (assessed as binding potential ( BPND)) of 11C-( R)-PK11195 compared to one of the most promising second-generation radioligands, 11C-DPA-713. Healthy subjects had dynamic PET scans and arterial blood measurements of radioligand after injection of either 11C-( R)-PK11195 (16 subjects) or 11C-DPA-713 (22 subjects). To measure the amount of specific binding, a subset of these subjects was scanned after administration of the TSPO blocking drug XBD173 (30-90 mg PO). 11C-DPA-713 showed a significant sensitivity to genotype in brain, whereas 11C-( R)-PK11195 did not. Lassen occupancy plot analysis revealed that the specific binding of 11C-DPA-713 was much greater than that of 11C-( R)-PK11195. The BPND in high-affinity binders was about 10-fold higher for 11C-DPA-713 (7.3) than for 11C-( R)-PK11195 (0.75). Although the high specific binding of 11C-DPA-713 suggests it is an ideal ligand to measure TSPO, we also found that its distribution volume increased over time, consistent with the accumulation of radiometabolites in brain.Entities:
Keywords: 18 kDa (TSPO); XBD173; metabolite-corrected arterial input; positron emission tomography; rs6971 polymorphism
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28322082 PMCID: PMC5851139 DOI: 10.1177/0271678X17699223
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cereb Blood Flow Metab ISSN: 0271-678X Impact factor: 6.200