| Literature DB >> 29779045 |
Zuzana Walker1,2, Federica Gandolfo3, Stefania Orini3, Valentina Garibotto4, Federica Agosta5, Javier Arbizu6, Femke Bouwman7, Alexander Drzezga8, Peter Nestor9,10, Marina Boccardi11,12, Daniele Altomare12,13, Cristina Festari12,13, Flavio Nobili14.
Abstract
PURPOSE: There are no comprehensive guidelines for the use of FDG PET in the following three clinical scenarios: (1) diagnostic work-up of patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD) at risk of future cognitive decline, (2) discriminating idiopathic PD from progressive supranuclear palsy, and (3) identifying the underlying neuropathology in corticobasal syndrome.Entities:
Keywords: Corticobasal degeneration; Corticobasal syndrome; FDG PET; Parkinson’s disease; Prodromal PD; Progressive supranuclear palsy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29779045 PMCID: PMC6061481 DOI: 10.1007/s00259-018-4031-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging ISSN: 1619-7070 Impact factor: 9.236
Fig. 1PRISMA flow chart of selected studies to identify brain dysfunction related to cognitive deterioration (PICO question 12), to discriminate PSP from PD (PICO question 13), and to identify the underlying pathological process in patients with CBS (PICO question 15) [8]
Availability of evidence and panellists’ decisions supporting the use of FDG PET in the diagnostic work-up of the main forms of parkinsonism
| PICO question | Relative availability of evidence | Panellists’ recommendations | Main reasons for final decision |
|---|---|---|---|
| 12 (PD-related decline) | Very low/lacking | Yes | Sensitive to cortical involvement before cognitive deficits appear |
| 13 (PSP) | Very low/lacking | Yes | Presence of typical hypometabolic patterns |
| 15 (CBS) | Fair | Yes | Presence of typical hypometabolism |
Delphi decisions for the other PICO questions of the EANM/EAN initiative led to supporting FDG PET in all clinical scenarios [1] with the exception of preclinical cases [9] and of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and Huntington’s disease [10]
Fig. 2A 67-year-old patient with de novo PD and subtle cognitive impairment (amnestic MCI), MMSE score 29/30 and high educational level. The FDG PET image shows bilateral posterior parieto-occipital hypometabolism with sparing of the posterior cingulate cortex
PICO question 13: Discriminate PSP from idiopathic PD. Quality of evidence for each critical outcome
| Critical outcomes | Number of studies | Sample size | Gold/reference standard | FDG PET assessment | Risk of biasa | Index test methodsb | Applicabilityc | Effect (CI)d | Effect assessmente | Effect inconsistencyf | Outcome qualityg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | 2 | 36 PSP | 1 study Follow-up diagnosis + 1 study Clinical diagnosis | Semiquantitative | Serious | Serious | Serious | 52.9% (28–77%) to 75% (49–91%) | Low | Serious | Very low |
| Specificity | 2 | 36 PSP | 1 study Follow-up diagnosis + 1 study Clinical diagnosis | Semiquantitative | Serious | Serious | Serious | 80% (56–94%) to 100% (73–100%) | High | Not serious | Low |
| Accuracy | 2 | 36 PSP | 1 study Follow-up diagnosis + 1 study Clinical diagnosis | Semiquantitative | Serious | Serious | Serious | 67.6% (50–82%) to 83.9% (66–94%) | Moderate | Not serious | Low |
| AUC | 1 | 19 PSP | 1 study Clinical diagnosis | Semiquantitative | Serious | Serious | Serious | 80% (CI NA) | Moderate | NA | Very low |
Relative availability of evidence: very low/lacking
CI 95% confidence interval, NA not applicable,PSP progressive supranuclear palsy, IPD idiopathic Parkinson’s disease
aAssessment of the study design and other methodological features (e.g. patient selection, clinical diagnostic criteria used)
bAssessment of index test methodology (e.g. technical details, image analysis methods and statistical analysis)
cRepresentativeness of the studied population and index test reproducibility in clinical practice (semiquantitative methods correspond to ‘serious’ indirectness, visual + semiquantitative methods correspond to ‘not serious’ indirectness, due to partial implementation of quantitation in clinical practice)
dLowest and highest values for each critical outcome; when more than one value was obtained for the same outcome, the highest was reported.
eLow 51–70%, moderate 71–80%, high 81–100%
f‘Not serious’ if difference between lowest and highest values 0–20, ‘serious’ 21–40, ‘very serious’ >40
gSummary of evidence from all columns
Fig. 3A 58-year-old patient with PSP and mild cognitive impairment (non-amnesic multiple domain MCI; MMSE score 26/30). The FDG PET image shows moderate hypometabolism of the bilateral frontal cortex, including the medial frontal gyri, and hypometabolism of the caudate nuclei mainly in the right hemisphere, and in the right thalamus
PICO question 15: Identify the underlying molecular pathology (e.g. amyloidosis or tauopathies) in CBS patients. Quality of evidence for each critical outcome
| Critical outcome | Number of studies | Sample size | Gold/reference standard | FDG PET assessment | Risk of bias | Index test methods | Applicability | Effect (CI) | Effect assessment | Effect inconsistency | Outcome quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | 2 | 39 | Biomarker-based diagnosis (amyloid-PET) | 1 Visual + semiquantitative | Not serious | Serious | Serious | 91% (59–100%) to 95% (standard error: 4%) | High | Not serious | Moderate |
| Specificity | 2 | 39 | Biomarker-based diagnosis (amyloid-PET) | 1 Visual + semiquantitative | Not serious | Serious | Serious | 58% (29–82%) to 75% (standard error: 14%) | Low | Not serious | Moderate |
| Accuracy | 2 | 39 | Biomarker-based diagnosis (amyloid-PET) | 1 Visual + semiquantitative | Not serious | Serious | Serious | 73% (51–88%) to 82% (standard error: 10%) | Moderate | Not serious | Moderate |
| PPV | 1 | 14 | Biomarker-based diagnosis (amyloid-PET) | 1 Semiquantitative | Not serious | Serious | Serious | 68% (NA) | Low | NA | Moderate |
| NPV | 1 | 14 | Biomarker-based diagnosis (amyloid-PET) | 1 Semiquantitative | Not serious | Serious | Serious | 97% (NA) | High | NA | Moderate |
| LR+ | 1 | 14 | Biomarker-based diagnosis (amyloid-PET) | 1 Semiquantitative | Not serious | Serious | Serious | 3.90 (NA) | Moderate | NA | Moderate |
| LR- | 1 | 14 | Biomarker-based diagnosis (amyloid-PET) | 1 Semiquantitative | Not serious | Serious | Serious | 0.06 (NA) | High | NA | Moderate |
Relative availability of evidence: fair
CI 95% confidence interval, NA not applicable
aAssessment of the study design and other methodological features (e.g. patient selection, clinical diagnostic criteria used)
bAssessment of index test methodology (e.g. technical details, image analysis methods and statistical analysis)
cRepresentativeness of the studied population and index test reproducibility in clinical practice (semiquantitative methods correspond to ‘serious’ indirectness, visual + semiquantitative methods correspond to ‘not serious’ indirectness, due to partial implementation of quantitation in clinical practice)
dLowest and highest values for each critical outcome; when more than one value was obtained for the same outcome, the highest was reported.
eLow 51–70%, moderate 71–80%, high 81–100%
f‘Not serious’ if difference between lowest and highest values 0–20, ‘serious’ 21–40, ‘very serious’ >40
gSummary of evidence from all columns
Fig. 4A 76-year-old patient with CBS and mild cognitive impairment (non-amnestic, multiple domain MCI; MMSE score 28/30). The FDG PET image shows severe hypometabolism in the whole right hemisphere, including the basal ganglia and thalamus, with more severe hypometabolism in the temporoparietal cortex. Dopamine transporter SPECT imaging showed severely reduced uptake in the right basal ganglia, suggesting CBD