Cognitive and functional patterns of nondemented subjects with equivocal visual amyloid PET findings

P. Payoux, J. Delrieu,A. Gallini,D. Adel,A. S. Salabert, A. Hitzel,C. Cantet,M. Tafani,D. De Verbizier, J. Darcourt, Ph. Fernandez,J. Monteil, I. Carrié,T. Voisin, S. Gillette-Guyonnet,M. Pontecorvo,B. Vellas,S. Andrieu

European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging(2015)

引用 28|浏览14
暂无评分
摘要
Purpose Despite good to excellent inter-reader agreement in the evaluation of amyloid load on PET scans in subjects with Alzheimer's disease, some equivocal findings have been reported in the literature. We aimed to describe the clinical characteristics of subjects with equivocal PET images. Methods Nondemented subjects aged 70 years or more were enrolled from the MAPT trial. Cognitive and functional assessments were conducted at baseline, at 6 months, and annually for 3 years. During the follow-up period, 271 subjects had 18 F-AV45 PET scans. Images were visually assessed by three observers and classified as positive, negative or equivocal (if one observer disagreed). After debate, equivocal images were reclassified as positive (EP+) or negative (EP−). Scans were also classified by semiautomated quantitative analysis using mean amyloid uptake of cortical regions. We evaluated agreement among the observers, and between visual and quantitative assessments using kappa coefficients, and compared the clinical characteristics of the subjects according to their PET results. Results In 158 subjects (58.30 %) the PET scan was negative for amyloid, in 77 (28.41 %) the scan was positive and in 36 (13.28 %) the scan was equivocal. Agreement among the three observers was excellent (kappa 0.80). Subjects with equivocal images were more frequently men (58 % vs. 37 %) and exhibited intermediate scores on cognitive and functional scales between those of subjects with positive and negative scans. Amyloid load differed between the EP− and negative groups and between the EP+ and positive groups after reclassification. Conclusion Equivocal amyloid PET images could represent a neuroimaging entity with intermediate amyloid load but without a specific neuropsychological pattern. Clinical follow-up to assess cognitive evolution in subjects with equivocal scans is needed.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Alzheimer's disease,PET,Amyloid imaging,Elderly,MAPT trial
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要