1. Dopamine transporter imaging deficit predicts early transition to synucleinopathy in idiopathic rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder
- Author
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Alex, Iranzo, Joan, Santamaría, Francesc, Valldeoriola, Monica, Serradell, Manel, Salamero, Carles, Gaig, Aida, Niñerola-Baizán, Raquel, Sánchez-Valle, Albert, Lladó, Roberto, De Marzi, Ambra, Stefani, Klaus, Seppi, Javier, Pavia, Birgit, Högl, Werner, Poewe, Eduard, Tolosa, and Francisco, Lomeña
- Subjects
Aged, 80 and over ,Lewy Body Disease ,Male ,Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon ,Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,Polysomnography ,Synucleins ,Brain ,Parkinson Disease ,REM Sleep Behavior Disorder ,Middle Aged ,Disease Progression ,Humans ,Female ,Biomarkers ,Aged - Abstract
To determine the usefulness of dopamine transporter (DAT) imaging to identify idiopathic rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder (IRBD) patients at risk for short-term development of clinically defined synucleinopathy.Eighty-seven patients with polysomnography-confirmed IRBD underwentBaseline DAT deficit was found in 51 (58.6%) patients. During follow-up, 25 (28.7%) subjects developed clinically defined synucleinopathy (Parkinson's disease in 11, dementia with Lewy bodies in 13, and multiple system atrophy in 1) with mean latency of 3.2 ± 1.9 years from imaging. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showed increased risk of incident synucleinopathy in patients with abnormal DAT-SPECT than with normal DAT-SPECT (20% vs 6% at 3 years, 33% vs 18% at 5 years; log rank test, p = 0.006). Receiver operating characteristics curve revealed that reduction of FP-CIT uptake in putamen greater than 25% discriminated patients with DAT deficit who developed synucleinopathy from patients with DAT deficit that remained disease free after 3 years of follow-up. At 5-year follow-up, DAT-SPECT had 75% sensitivity, 51% specificity, 44% positive predictive value, 80% negative predictive value, and likelihood ratio 1.54 to predict synucleinopathy.DAT-SPECT identifies IRBD patients at short-term risk for synucleinopathy. Decreased FP-CIT putamen uptake greater than 25% predicts synucleinopathy after 3 years' follow-up. These observations may be useful to select candidates for disease modification trials in IRBD. Ann Neurol 2017;82:419-428.
- Published
- 2017