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Practical utility of amyloid and FDG-PET in an academic dementia center
- Sánchez-Juan, Pascual;
- Ghosh, Pia M;
- Hagen, Jayne;
- Gesierich, Benno;
- Henry, Maya;
- Grinberg, Lea T;
- O'Neil, James P;
- Janabi, Mustafa;
- Huang, Eric J;
- Trojanowski, John Q;
- Vinters, Harry V;
- Gorno-Tempini, Marilu;
- Seeley, William W;
- Boxer, Adam L;
- Rosen, Howard J;
- Kramer, Joel H;
- Miller, Bruce L;
- Jagust, William J;
- Rabinovici, Gil D
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.0000000000000032Abstract
Objective
To evaluate the effect of amyloid imaging on clinical decision making.Methods
We conducted a retrospective analysis of 140 cognitively impaired patients (mean age 65.0 years, 46% primary β-amyloid (Aβ) diagnosis, mean Mini-Mental State Examination 22.3) who underwent amyloid (Pittsburgh compound B [PiB]) PET as part of observational research studies and were evaluated clinically before and after the scan. One hundred thirty-four concurrently underwent fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)-PET. We assessed for changes between the pre- and post-PET clinical diagnosis (from Aβ to non-Aβ diagnosis or vice versa) and Alzheimer disease treatment plan. The association between PiB/FDG results and changes in management was evaluated using χ(2) and multivariate logistic regression. Postmortem diagnosis was available for 24 patients (17%).Results
Concordance between scan results and baseline diagnosis was high (PiB 84%, FDG 82%). The primary diagnosis changed after PET in 13/140 patients (9%) overall but in 5/13 (38%) patients considered pre-PET diagnostic dilemmas. When examined independently, discordant PiB and discordant FDG were both associated with diagnostic change (unadjusted p < 0.0001). However, when examined together in a multivariate logistic regression, only discordant PiB remained significant (adjusted p = 0.00013). Changes in treatment were associated with discordant PiB in patients with non-Aβ diagnoses (adjusted p = 0.028), while FDG had no effect on therapy. Both PiB (96%) and FDG (91%) showed high agreement with autopsy diagnosis.Conclusions
PET had a moderate effect on clinical outcomes. Discordant PiB had a greater effect than discordant FDG, and influence on diagnosis was greater than on treatment. Prospective studies are needed to better characterize the clinical role of amyloid PET.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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