[ 18 F] AV-1451 uptake in corticobasal syndrome: the influence of beta-amyloid and clinical presentation

AbstractCorticobasal syndrome (CBS) is a phenotypic manifestation of diverse pathologies, including Alzheimer ’s disease and 4-repeat tauopathies. Predicting pathology in CBS is unreliable and, hence, molecular neuroimaging may prove to be useful. The aim of this study was to assess regional patterns of uptake on [18F] AV-1451 PET in CBS and determine whether patterns of uptake differ according to beta-amyloid deposition or differing clinical presentations. Fourteen patients meeting criteria for CBS underwent Pittsburgh Compound B (PiB) and [18F] AV-1451 PET. Seven patients presented as CBS and seven presented with apraxia of speech (AOS) and later evolved into CBS. A global PiB summary was calculated and used to classify patients as PiB ( −) or PiB (+). AV-1451 uptake was calculated in fourteen regions-of-interest, with values divided by uptake in cerebellar crus grey matter to generate standard uptake value ratios. AV-1451 uptake was considered elevated if it fell above the 95th percentile from a group of 476 cognitively unimpaire d normal controls. Six of the 14 CBS patients (43%) were PiB (+), with three of these patients showing strikingly elevated AV-1451 uptake across many cortical regions. Of the eight PiB (−) patients, only those with AOS showed elevated AV-1451 uptake in supplementary motor area and precentral corte x compared to controls. No region of elevated AV-1451 uptake were observed in PiB (−) typical CBS patients without AOS. These results suggest th...
Source: Journal of Neurology - Category: Neurology Source Type: research