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Amyloid PET in Patients With Mild Cognitive Impairment and Early Dementia

Recruiting
Conditions
MCI
Registration Number
NCT06402370
Lead Sponsor
University Hospital, Ghent
Brief Summary

The National Institute on Aging together with the Alzheimer's Association (NIA-AA) recently proposed the ATN classification which is based upon the pathological processes present in Alzheimer's disease (amyloid, tau and neurodegeneration). The amyloid and tau status can be defined using cerebrospinal fluid analysis but also non-invasively using an amyloid or tau PET scan. The N status can be defined using an \[18F\]-FDG PET scan which is in Belgium part of standard of care. Recently, it has been demonstrated, using different amyloid PET tracers, that early-frame amyloid scans can be a surrogate for \[18F\]-FDG PET scan.

Detailed Description

With the general aging of the population, neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer have an increasing prevalence. Recently, anti-β-amyloid-antibodies such as aducanumab and donanemab are under development. These treatments urge for techniques allowing early diagnosis and treatment monitoring during disease. \[18F\]FDG PET allows the visualization of metabolic disturbances and aid in the early diagnosis of Alzheimer, Amyloid PET is able to detect the amyloid plaques which can be present years before symptom onset. A recent meta-analysis demonstrated that amyloid PET has a high sensitivity (0.91) and specificity (0.81) in the differential diagnosis between Alzheimer and controls, however very poor specificity (0.41) was observed when differentiating between Alzheimer and patients with mild cognitive impairment.

The National Institute on Aging together with the Alzheimer's Association (NIA-AA) recently proposed the ATN classification which is based upon the pathological processes present in Alzheimer's disease (amyloid, tau and neurodegeneration). The amyloid and tau status can be obtained using cerebrospinal fluid analysis but also non-invasively using an amyloid or tau PET scan. The N status can be obtained using an \[18F\]FDG PET scan which is in Belgium part of standard of care. Both the \[18F\]FDG PET scan and the amyloid scans using \[18F\]Vizamyl are also proposed in the diagnostic algorithm for early and differential diagnoses of dementia .

Perfusion scans using \[15O\]H2O have shown a good correlation with \[18F\]FDG PET, illustrating the potential of perfusion as a proxy for neuronal dysfunction. Previously, it has been demonstrated that early amyloid scans represent perfusion and can therefore be used as a proxy for neuronal activity.

Next generation PET/CT scanners, such as the Omni Legend have a very high sensitivity which may enable ultra-short PET scans, which is important is this vulnerable patient group, or dynamic scans with a high effective time resolution due to the possibility to acquire short time frames with reasonable noise characteristics. Moreover, the ultrashort scan may limit the movement artefacts frequently encountered in this study population.

The investigators hypothesize that a one minute scan 5 minutes postinjection is sufficient to determine the N-status of a patients and that a one minute scan 90-110 minutes postinjection can determine the A-status.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
50
Inclusion Criteria
  • Patients with mild cognitive impairment or early stage dementia who have a MRI and [18F]FDG PET/CT scan as part of routine clinical work-up
Exclusion Criteria
  • Patient is not able to understand the study Patient is not able to lie still in the scanner for at least 30 minutes Pregnancy or breastfeeding

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
A-status2 years

A-status can be determined with a one minute scan 60-90 minutes after injection

N-status2 years

N-status can be determined using ultrashort early frame amyloid scans of 1 minute

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Van Weehaeghe D

🇧🇪

Gent, Belgium

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