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Erschienen in: European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging 12/2016

19.07.2016 | Original Article

Feasibility and acceptance of simultaneous amyloid PET/MRI

verfasst von: Lisa Schütz, Donald Lobsien, Dominik Fritzsch, Solveig Tiepolt, Peter Werner, Matthias L. Schroeter, Jörg Berrouschot, Dorothee Saur, Swen Hesse, Thies Jochimsen, Michael Rullmann, Bernhard Sattler, Marianne Patt, Hermann-Josef Gertz, Arno Villringer, Joseph Claßen, Karl-Titus Hoffmann, Osama Sabri, Henryk Barthel

Erschienen in: European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | Ausgabe 12/2016

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Abstract

Purpose

Established Alzheimer’s disease (AD) biomarker concepts classify into amyloid pathology and neuronal injury biomarkers, while recent alternative concepts classify into diagnostic and progression AD biomarkers. However, combined amyloid positron emission tomography/magnetic resonance imaging (PET/MRI) offers the chance to obtain both biomarker category read-outs within one imaging session, with increased patient as well as referrer convenience. The aim of this pilot study was to investigate this matter for the first time.

Methods

100 subjects (age 70 ± 10 yrs, 46 female), n = 51 with clinically defined mild cognitive impairment (MCI), n = 44 with possible/probable AD dementia, and n = 5 with frontotemporal lobe degeneration, underwent simultaneous [18F]florbetaben or [11C]PIB PET/MRI (3 Tesla Siemens mMR). Brain amyloid load, mesial temporal lobe atrophy (MTLA) by means of the Scheltens scale, and other morphological brain pathologies were scored by respective experts. The patients/caregivers as well as the referrers were asked to assess on a five-point scale the convenience related to the one-stop-shop PET and MRI approach.

Results

In three subjects, MRI revealed temporal lobe abnormalities other than MTLA. According to the National Institute on Aging-Alzheimer’s Association classification, the combined amyloid-beta PET/MRI evaluation resulted in 31 %, 45 %, and 24 % of the MCI subjects being categorized as “MCI-unlikely due to AD”, “MCI due to AD-intermediate likelihood”, and “MCI due to AD-high likelihood”, respectively. 50 % of the probable AD dementia patients were categorized as “High level of evidence of AD pathophysiological process”, and 56 % of the possible AD dementia patients as “Possible AD dementia - with evidence of AD pathophysiological process”. With regard to the International Working Group 2 classification, 36 subjects had both positive diagnostic and progression biomarkers. The patient/caregiver survey revealed a gain of convenience in 88 % of responders as compared to a theoretically separate PET and MR imaging. In the referrer survey, an influence of the combined amyloid-beta PET/MRI on the final diagnosis was reported by 82 % of responders, with a referrer acceptance score of 3.7 ± 1.0 on a 5-point scale.

Conclusion

Simultaneous amyloid PET/MRI is feasible and provides imaging biomarkers of all categories which are able to supplement the clinical diagnosis of MCI due to AD and that of AD dementia. Further, patient and referrer convenience is improved by this one-stop-shop imaging approach.
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Metadaten
Titel
Feasibility and acceptance of simultaneous amyloid PET/MRI
verfasst von
Lisa Schütz
Donald Lobsien
Dominik Fritzsch
Solveig Tiepolt
Peter Werner
Matthias L. Schroeter
Jörg Berrouschot
Dorothee Saur
Swen Hesse
Thies Jochimsen
Michael Rullmann
Bernhard Sattler
Marianne Patt
Hermann-Josef Gertz
Arno Villringer
Joseph Claßen
Karl-Titus Hoffmann
Osama Sabri
Henryk Barthel
Publikationsdatum
19.07.2016
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Erschienen in
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging / Ausgabe 12/2016
Print ISSN: 1619-7070
Elektronische ISSN: 1619-7089
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00259-016-3462-x

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