| Literature DB >> 35327650 |
Michael Rullmann1, Matthias Brendel2, Matthias L Schroeter3,4, Dorothee Saur5, Johannes Levin6,7,8, Robert G Perneczky7,8,9,10,11, Solveig Tiepolt1, Marianne Patt1, Andre Mueller12, Victor L Villemagne13, Joseph Classen5, Andrew W Stephens12, Osama Sabri1, Henryk Barthel1.
Abstract
Tau aggregates accumulate in the Alzheimer's disease (AD) brain according to the established Braak staging scheme and spread from transentorhinal over limbic regions to the neocortex. To impact the management of AD patients, an in vivo tool for tau Braak staging is needed. First-generation tau tracers have limited performance in detecting early stages of tau. Therefore, we tested the corresponding capability of the next-generation tau tracer, 18F-PI-2620. We analyzed 18F-PI-2620 multicenter PET data from 37 beta-amyloid-positive AD dementia patients and those from 26 healthy controls. We applied kinetic modeling of the 0-60 min p.i. PET data using MRTM2 with the lower cerebellum as the reference region to extract Braak stage-dependent distribution volume ratios, whereas controls were used to define Braak stage PET positivity thresholds. Stage-dependent PET positivity widely followed the Braak scheme (except Braak stage III) presenting descending frequency of PET positivity from Braak I (43%), II (38%), III (49%), IV (35%), V (30%) to VI (14%). A strictly hierarchical model was met by 64% of AD dementia cases. Nineteen percent showed a hippocampal sparing tauopathy pattern. Thus, we could assign 87% to the six-stage hierarchical Braak model including tauopathy variants. 18F-PI-2620 PET appears to be able to perform Braak tau staging of AD in vivo.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Braak staging; PET; PI-2620; Tau
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35327650 PMCID: PMC8946049 DOI: 10.3390/biom12030458
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Demographic information of all participants.
| Parameter | Patients with | Healthy Controls |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| N | 38 | 26 | |
| Sex (female/male) | 21/17 | 13/13 | 0.8 1 |
| Age (years) | 69 ± 9 | 67 ± 11 | 0.24 2 |
| MMSE (if available) | 20 ± 6 ( | 29 ± 1 ( | 6 × 10−8 2 |
1 Exact Fisher test. 2 Student’s t test.
Figure 1Frequency of 18F-PI-2620 tau PET positivity for (A) each Braak stage and (B) the combined Braak stage model.
Figure 2Voxel-wise frequency map of tau positivity of all voxels from all AD dementia cases projected on a cortex surface.
Figure 3Mean parametric 18F-PI-2620 PET distribution volume ratio (DVR) images of healthy controls (top row) and patients with Alzheimer’s dementia (bottom row) overlayed on an averaged anatomical MRI scan in standard space of the Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI).
Figure 4Association between 18F-PI-2620 DVR and MMSE score. Partial correlation was adjusted for age. AD dementia: participants with Alzheimer’s dementia. HC: healthy controls.
Figure 5Example AD dementia cases for each Braak stage showing parametric tau PET image fused with a standard MRI (left), MRI including Braak atlas regions (middle) and individual Braak profile (right). The plot shows mean DVR values of each Braak stage (cyan) in relation to the normal DVR (gray) defined by the healthy controls.