Journal of Alzheimer's Disease
Published on Journal of Alzheimer's Disease (https://www.j-alz.com)

Home > Detection of Striatal Amyloid Plaques with [18F]flutemetamol: Validation with Postmortem Histopathology.

TitleDetection of Striatal Amyloid Plaques with [18F]flutemetamol: Validation with Postmortem Histopathology.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsBeach, TG, Thal, DRudolf, Zanette, M, Smith, A, Buckley, C
JournalJ Alzheimers Dis
Volume52
Issue3
Pagination863-73
Date Published2016 Mar 31
ISSN1875-8908
Abstract

Amyloid imaging is limited by an inconsistent relationship between cerebral cortex amyloid- β (Aβ) plaques and dementia. Autopsy studies suggest that Aβ plaques first appear in the cerebral cortex while subcortical plaques are present only later in the disease course. The presence of abundant plaques in both cortex and striatum is more strongly correlated with the presence of dementia than cortical Aβ plaques alone. Additionally, detection of striatal plaques may allow, for the first time, pathology-based clinical staging of AD. Striatal plaques are reportedly identifiable by amyloid imaging but the accuracy and reliability of striatal amyloid imaging has never been tested against postmortem histopathology. To determine this, we correlated the presence of histopathologically-demonstrated striatal Aβ deposits with a visually positive panel consensus decision of a positive [18F]flutemetamol striatal PET signal in 68 subjects that later came to autopsy. The sensitivity of [18F]flutemetamol PET striatal amyloid imaging, for several defined density levels of histological striatal Aβ deposits, ranged between 69% and 87% while the specificity ranged between 96% and 100%. Sensitivity increased with higher histological density thresholds while the reverse was found for specificity. In general, as compared with PET alone, PET with CT had slightly higher sensitivities but slightly lower specificities. In conclusion, amyloid imaging of the striatum with [18F]flutemetamol PET has reasonable accuracy for the detection of histologically-demonstrated striatal Aβ plaques when present at moderate or frequent densities. Amyloid imaging of the cerebral cortex and striatum together may allow for a more accurate clinicopathological diagnosis of AD and enable pathology-based clinical staging of AD.

DOI10.3233/JAD-150732
Alternate JournalJ. Alzheimers Dis.
PubMed ID27031469
E-mail Icon
Comment Icon
  • Comment
Bookmark Icon Bookmark Recommend Icon Recommend Follow Icon Follow
  • Comment
| Bookmark | Recommend | Follow

Source URL: https://www.j-alz.com/content/detection-striatal-amyloid-plaques-18fflutemetamol-validation-postmortem-histopathology