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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Small GW, Kepe V, Ercoli LM, Siddarth P, Bookheimer SY, Miller KJ, Lavretsky H, Burggren AC, Cole GM, Vinters HV, Thompson PM, Huang SC, Satyamurthy N, Phelps ME, Barrio JR. PET of brain amyloid and tau in mild cognitive impairment. N Engl J Med. 2006 Dec 21;355(25):2652-63. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: PET Probe Lights Up MCI, AD

Comment by:  Christopher Rowe
Submitted 22 December 2006  |  Permalink Posted 22 December 2006

This paper shows that imaging of specific pathology with PET tracers provides diagnostic advantages over non-specific measures, such as atrophy on MRI and hypometabolism on FDG PET, that should lead to increased accuracy in the diagnosis of AD and much earlier diagnosis. However, there is room for substantial improvement in ligands for amyloid and tau imaging. FDDNP only showed a 9 percent increase in binding in AD compared to controls. Despite this small increase, the scan was able to distinguish all AD from controls due to very low variance in the groups and very low test-retest variation. This required a 2-hour scan that is not practical for widespread clinical application and it may be difficult for other groups to reproduce this level of precision. In contrast, C-11 PIB shows an 80-100 percent increase in cortical binding in AD compared to controls, and a simple delayed image of 20-30 minutes’ duration has been validated as an alternative to DVR. PIB images should be easier for clinicians to read. PIB is more specific, binding only to Aβ plaques, and therefore more...  Read more

  Primary News: PET Probe Lights Up MCI, AD

Comment by:  Agneta Nordberg
Submitted 26 December 2006  |  Permalink Posted 26 December 2006

In this study, the authors have used a somewhat unusual approach to recruit patients to take part in PET studies of Alzheimer disease (AD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI). They have made advertisements about the study, including media coverage. From an initial sample of 737 volunteers, they included 25 AD, 28 MCI, and 30 controls in the study. All subjects who volunteered for the study described subjective memory problems. The 30 controls selected among the volunteering subjects have been found to have no measurable cognitive impairment. These 30 subjects would by many clinicians be called “subjects with subjective memory problems (subjective MCI),” but not considered to be controls.

Since some of the MCI patients were on cholinesterase inhibitor treatment, it might be possible that due to treatment effect they are not correctly classified as AD based on the cognitive tests.

There is a follow-up of 12 controls and four MCI subjects (two converted to AD) both with PET and cognitive testing. Since only two out of 28 MCI subjects are reported to convert to AD during 24...  Read more


  Primary News: PET Probe Lights Up MCI, AD

Comment by:  Kaj Blennow
Submitted 2 January 2007  |  Permalink Posted 2 January 2007

FDDNP-PET shows promise for monitoring plaque and tangle pathology in Alzheimer patients
Research advances on the molecular pathogenesis of Alzheimer disease (AD) have led to several drug candidates with potential disease-modifying effects, for example, secretase inhibitors and β amyloid immunotherapy. If any of these drugs prove to have a clinical effect, they are likely to have the best efficacy in the early phase of the disease, when the neuronal degeneration has not become too widespread. Thus, there is a great need for diagnostic tools, often called biomarkers, which will enable early and accurate diagnosis of AD. Especially, biomarkers allowing the identification of incipient AD already in patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) would be of great value.

However, considering the large variation in the distribution and severity of both neuropathological changes and neurochemical abnormalities among AD cases, it is unlikely that any single biomarker will fulfill the requirements of high enough sensitivity and specificity. Instead, combinations of...  Read more


  Comment by:  Henry Engler
Submitted 9 January 2007  |  Permalink Posted 9 January 2007

I want to congratulate the authors for this interesting, complex, well-performed study. It is stimulating to see that great effort is undertaken in the field of the PET technology to detect in vivo, pathological changes occurring in neurodegenerative diseases.

In general, I agree with the comments by Professors Rowe, Blennow, and Nordberg. In my opinion, the strongest potential of FDDNP is the capability to detect neurofibrillary tangles, whereas PIB remains as a strong amyloid marker with a high level of discrimination between subjects with amyloid deposition and subjects without it (90 percent difference in parietal cortex!). More study must be done to clarify the future role of these two novel tracers in clinical routine as well as in the follow-up of different treatments. Meanwhile, here are some reflections:

1. PET is not a precision tool. For a PET tracer in clinical routine, its level of discrimination is an important factor. The long scanning time and the small percent difference between groups represent to me disadvantages of FDDNP compared with PIB.

2. For...  Read more


  Comment by:  Gary W. Small (Disclosure)
Submitted 8 March 2007  |  Permalink Posted 8 March 2007
  I recommend this paper

This comment was co-authored by Gary Small, Henry Huang, Vladir Kepe, and Jorge Barrio

We appreciate the interest that our paper has generated and wish to comment on some of the previous observations and clarify some points. In our New England Journal of Medicine paper (2006;355;2652-2663), we used a full 120 minute scan time for the purpose of validation of the quantification method, but we have also evaluated successfully the reduction of the FDDNP scan time from 120 to 60 minutes. For routine applications, we have found that a late scan reading between 30 to 60 minutes is not only sufficient but makes the procedure very easy to tolerate.

As presented in the paper, we have performed a brain autopsy in one of the patients scanned with FDDNP. Whereas tangles were found predominantly in the medial temporal lobe, plaques were the predominant pathology in the rest of the brain, confirming data in the literature. With knowledge of the distribution of plaques and tangles in a degenerating brain, FDDNP-PET could be used as a surrogate marker to monitor either anti-plaque...  Read more

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