Prevalence and longitudinal clinical outcomes of negative, moderate, and advanced 18F-flortaucipir PET visual patterns in aging and Alzheimer’s disease

Alexis Moscoso, Fiona Heeman, Valle Camacho, Martijn van Essen, Michel J. Grothe, Li Lin, Isminni Mainta, Federica Ribaldi, Michael D. Devous, Michael J. Pontecorvo, Giovanni B. Frisoni, Valentina Garibotto, Michael Schöll

Research output: Contribution to journalComment/Letter to the editorAcademic

Abstract

Background: The advent of positron emission tomography (PET) imaging with tracers such as [18F]flortaucipir (FTP) has allowed in-vivo visualization of aggregated tau in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Recently, a clinically applicable visual interpretation method for FTP PET yielding negative, moderate, and advanced AD visual patterns was developed, leading to its subsequent approval by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Yet, the prevalence and longitudinal clinical outcomes of the different AD-associated visual patterns, in particular the moderate AD pattern, have not been investigated systematically across the clinical spectrum of AD. Method: We included cognitively normal individuals and patients with mild cognitive impairment and AD dementia from five observational cohort studies — Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI), Harvard Aging Brain study (HABS), A4 study, AVID’s A05 study and Geneva Memory Clinic cohort — all of which had available FTP PET scans. Furthermore, Aβ status, established with Aβ PET, was available in 1924 participants (98%), and longitudinal clinical and cognitive data was obtained for 968 participants over an average follow-up time of 2.2 years. Three readers, blinded to clinical and imaging information, will independently evaluate each FTP PET scan, and an individual’s FTP uptake pattern will be interpreted as negative, moderate, or advanced AD tau pattern, based on the majority read of the three readers. Multinomial generalized additive models (GAM) will be fitted to provide prevalence estimates of each FTP AD pattern. Mixed models for repeated measures (MMRM) will be used to estimate cognitive decline trajectories. Result: A total of 1963 participants had available FTP PET scans. We will investigate the prevalence of the different FTP AD patterns as a function of age per diagnostic group, stratifying participants by β-amyloid status and APOE genotype. Further, in the subset of participants with available longitudinal clinical data, we will explore how the different FTP patterns associate with clinical decline across the aforementioned diagnostic groups. Conclusion: Our large-scale study will contribute significantly to elucidating the clinical relevance of FTP visual reads across the AD spectrum, potentially widening its applicability and promoting its use in patient assessment and in clinical prevention trials.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere068009
JournalAlzheimer's and Dementia
Volume18
Issue numberS1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2022

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