| Literature DB >> 30762136 |
Heather Wilson1, Gennaro Pagano1, Marios Politis2.
Abstract
The dementia spectrum encompasses a range of disorders with complex diagnosis, pathophysiology and limited treatment options. Positron emission tomography (PET) imaging provides insights into specific neurodegenerative processes underlying dementia disorders in vivo. Here we focus on some of the most common dementias: Alzheimer's disease, Parkinsonism dementias including Parkinson's disease with dementia, dementia with Lewy bodies, progressive supranuclear palsy and corticobasal syndrome, and frontotemporal lobe degeneration. PET tracers have been developed to target specific proteinopathies (amyloid, tau and α-synuclein), glucose metabolism, cholinergic system and neuroinflammation. Studies have shown distinct imaging abnormalities can be detected early, in some cases prior to symptom onset, allowing disease progression to be monitored and providing the potential to predict symptom onset. Furthermore, advances in PET imaging have identified potential therapeutic targets and novel methods to accurately discriminate between different types of dementias in vivo. There are promising imaging markers with a clinical application on the horizon, however, further studies are required before they can be implantation into clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Dementia; Molecular imaging; Parkinsonism dementias; Positron emission tomography
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30762136 PMCID: PMC6449308 DOI: 10.1007/s00702-019-01975-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neural Transm (Vienna) ISSN: 0300-9564 Impact factor: 3.575
PET tracers employed to assess pathophysiology in dementia spectrum disorders
| Target system | PET radioligand | Disease cohort | PET molecular changes | Applications |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brain glucose metabolism | [18F]FDG | AD | Hypometabolism in the parietotemporal, posterior cingulate, medial temporal, with additional hypometabolism in the frontal cortex in advanced AD | Differential diagnosis between Parkinsonian dementia (PDD or DLB) and dementia due to AD |
| DLB | Widespread hypometabolism with most prominent metabolic reductions in the occipital cortex | |||
| PDD | Greater hypometabolism in the visual cortex and persevered metabolism in medial temporal cortex compared to AD | |||
| PSP | Hypometabolism in the medial frontal cortex, premotor areas | Differential diagnosis between PD and atypical parkinsonism (MSA, PSP or CBS) | ||
| CBS | Asymmetric hypometabolism contralateral to the clinically most affected side involving parietal cortex, primary sensorimotor cortex, the medial and lateral premotor areas, striatum, and thalamus | |||
| MSA | Hypometabolism in the putamen, cerebellum, and brainstem | |||
| FTD | bv FTD: frontal lobe hypometabolism | Differential diagnosis between FTD and AD | ||
| Amyloid-β pathology | [11C]PIB | AD | High cortical uptake, mostly in frontal | Clinical diagnosis of AD, based on positive amyloid load; and differential diagnosis between FTD and AD |
| DLB | High cortical [11C]PiB retention associated with cognitive impairment | Differentiate DLB from PDD | ||
| PDD | Lower cortical [11C]PiB retention compared to DLB. Amyloid-β positive PDD is associated with increased amyloid-β in cortical and striatal regions and could be predictive of cognitive decline | |||
| PSP | Normal | |||
| CBS | Normal | |||
| MSA | Normal | |||
| FTD | Low cortical [11C]PIB retention in line with controls, supporting the absence of amyloid-β pathology in FTD | Differential diagnosis between FTD and AD | ||
| Tau pathology | [18F]AV1451 (also known as [18F]T807) | AD | [18F]AV1451 uptake is consistent with the known distribution of tau pathology, and compatible with Braak staging | To monitor disease progression and conversion from MCI to AD |
| DLB | Increased [18F]AV1451 uptake has been reported in the posterior temporoparietal, occipital cortex and precuneus in DLB | Increased [18F]AV1451 uptake in the medial temporal cortex could distinguish AD dementia from probable DLB | ||
| PDD | Increased [18F]AV1451 in inferior temporal cortex compared to PD without cognitive impairment. Lower tau load in the cortex and striatum compared to DLB | Preliminary results from second-generation tau tracers, such as [18F]PI-2620, suggest different and specific binding patterns, with no off-target binding, indicating the potential of tau PET imaging as a tool to aid differential diagnosis | ||
| PSP | Increased [18F]FDDNP binding in subthalamic area, midbrain region, and cerebellar white matter. Increased [18F]FDDNP binding in neocortical regions (frontal lobe, temporal lobe an posterior cingulate gyrus) only in PSP | |||
| CBS | Increased [18F]AV1451 uptake, in the absence of amyloid, in frontal and parietal cortical regions in CBS | |||
| MSA | Tau pathology should be absent, however, MSA patients with significant glial cytoplasmic inclusion burden can result in a false positive on tau PET imaging. Increased uptake of [18F]AV1451 in posterior putamen and increased uptake of [11C]PBB3 in cortical and subcortical regions has been described | |||
| FTD | Increased [18F]AV1451 binding in frontal, insular, anterior temporal and cingulate cortices in FTD | FTLD uptake in the parietal cortex is lower than in AD and could aid differential diagnosis of FTLD from AD | ||
| Neuroinflammation (TSPO) | [11C]PK11195 | AD | Increased [11C]PK11195 binding in frontal, temporal, parietal, occipital and cingulate cortices in AD, with similar distribution pattern to amyloid-β plaques | Potential to monitor disease severity and cognitive decline |
| DLB | Increased [11C]PK11195 binding in cortex, basal ganglia and substantia nigra | Potential to monitor cognitive decline | ||
| PDD | Increased [11C]PK11195 binding in the association cortex in PDD compared to non-demented PD | |||
| PSP | Increased [11C]PK11195 binding in caudate, putamen, pallidum, substantia nigra, midbrain, thalamus, cerebellum, and frontal lobe | Potential to monitor anti-inflammatory or immunomodulatory therapies | ||
| CBS | Increased [11C]PK11195 binding in caudate, putamen, substantia nigra, and frontoparietal cortex | |||
| MSA | Increased [11C]PK11195 binding was also found in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, caudate, putamen, pallidum, thalamus, substantia nigra, and pons | |||
| FTD | Increased [11C]PK11195 binding in FTD in the frontotemporal regions; with greater uptake in frontal subcortical white matter in FTD compared to AD | |||
| Cholinergic system | [11C]PMP (Presynaptic AChE) | AD | Reduced AChE activity in the cortex, hippocampus and amygdala consistent with widespread ChAT and AChE loss observed in AD post-mortem studies | To monitor cognitive decline and assess the effectiveness of new therapeutic treatments |
| DLB | Decreased cortical AChE activity in DLB compared to AD | |||
| PDD | Loss of cortical AChE activity is more apparent in PDD than in non-demented PD. Lower cortical AChE activity was associated with cognitive deficits but not with severity of motor symptoms | |||
| PSP | No significant changes in cortical mAChR levels in PSP patients with cognitive impairment | Differing cortical AChE activity in PSP and PD indicates potential use of to aid differential diagnosis | ||
| CBS | Decreased levels of AChE in cortical regions including the paracentral, frontal, parietal and occipital cortex | To assess the effectiveness of new therapeutic treatments | ||
| MSA | Decreased cortical and subcortical AChE | |||
| FTD | No differences in AChE activity in FTD compared to healthy controls | Potential use of to aid differential diagnosis |
TSPO translocator protein, ChAT choline acetyltransferase, AChE acetylcholinesterase, VAChT vesicular acetylcholine transporter, mAChR muscarinic acetylcholine receptors, nAChRs nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, AD Alzheimer’s disease, MSA Multiple system atrophy, MSA-P Parkinsonian type multiple system atrophy, MSA-C Cerebellar ataxia type multiple system atrophy, PSP Progressive supranuclear palsy, CBS Corticobasal syndrome, DLB dementia with Lewy bodies, PDD Parkinson’s disease dementia, bvFTD behavioural variant of Frontotemporal dementia
Fig. 1PET with [18F]AV1451 and [18F]AV45 showing differentiate uptake patterns of tau and amyloid pathology respectively in Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI), Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) and Corticobasal Syndrome (CBS). MCI and AD subjects show increased [18F]AV1451 in temporal cortices, while CBS subject shows asymmetrical uptake in frontal and parietal regions. MCI and AD show positive [18F]AV45 scans with widespread amyloid binding while CBS subject has no amyloid pathology. MCI patient 77 years of age, MMSE = 28, MoCA = 15; AD patient 75 years of age, MMSE = 25, MoCA = 15; and CBS patients 75 years of age, MMSE = 17, MoCA = 15. AD Alzheimer’s Disease, CBS Corticobasal Syndrome, MCI Mild Cognitive Impairment, MMSE Mini-Mental State Examination, MoCA Montreal Cognitive Assessment