Literature DB >> 28980714

18 F-flortaucipir tau positron emission tomography distinguishes established progressive supranuclear palsy from controls and Parkinson disease: A multicenter study.

Daniel R Schonhaut1,2,3, Corey T McMillan3, Salvatore Spina1, Bradford C Dickerson4, Andrew Siderowf5, Michael D Devous5, Richard Tsai1, Joseph Winer2, David S Russell6, Irene Litvan7, Erik D Roberson8, William W Seeley1,9, Lea T Grinberg1,9, Joel H Kramer1, Bruce L Miller1, Peter Pressman1, Ilya Nasrallah3, Suzanne L Baker2, Stephen N Gomperts4, Keith A Johnson4, Murray Grossman3, William J Jagust2, Adam L Boxer1, Gil D Rabinovici1,2.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: 18 F-flortaucipir (formerly 18 F-AV1451 or 18 F-T807) binds to neurofibrillary tangles in Alzheimer disease, but tissue studies assessing binding to tau aggregates in progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) have yielded mixed results. We compared in vivo 18 F-flortaucipir uptake in patients meeting clinical research criteria for PSP (n = 33) to normal controls (n = 46) and patients meeting criteria for Parkinson disease (PD; n = 26).
METHODS: Participants underwent magnetic resonance imaging and positron emission tomography for amyloid-β (11 C-PiB or 18 F-florbetapir) and tau (18 F-flortaucipir). 18 F-flortaucipir standardized uptake value ratios were calculated (t = 80-100 minutes, cerebellum gray matter reference). Voxelwise and region-of-interest group comparisons were performed in template space, with receiver operating characteristic curve analyses to assess single-subject discrimination. Qualitative comparisons with postmortem tau are reported in 1 patient who died 9 months after 18 F-flortaucipir.
RESULTS: Clinical PSP patients showed bilaterally elevated 18 F-flortaucipir uptake in globus pallidus, putamen, subthalamic nucleus, midbrain, and dentate nucleus relative to controls and PD patients (voxelwise p < 0.05 family wise error corrected). Globus pallidus binding best distinguished PSP patients from controls and PD (area under the curve [AUC] = 0.872 vs controls, AUC = 0.893 vs PD). PSP clinical severity did not correlate with 18 F-flortaucipir in any region. A patient with clinical PSP and pathological diagnosis of corticobasal degeneration had severe tau pathology in PSP-related brain structures with good correspondence between in vivo 18 F-flortaucipir and postmortem tau neuropathology.
INTERPRETATION: 18 F-flortaucipir uptake was elevated in PSP versus controls and PD patients in a pattern consistent with the expected distribution of tau pathology. Ann Neurol 2017;82:622-634.
© 2017 American Neurological Association.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28980714      PMCID: PMC5665658          DOI: 10.1002/ana.25060

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Neurol        ISSN: 0364-5134            Impact factor:   10.422


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  64 in total

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2.  MRI Outperforms [18F]AV-1451 PET as a Longitudinal Biomarker in Progressive Supranuclear Palsy.

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3.  [18F]-AV-1451 tau PET imaging in Alzheimer's disease and suspected non-AD tauopathies using a late acquisition time window.

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