141 results on '"Doré V"'
Search Results
2. Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Comparison of Tau Imaging with 18F-MK6240 and 18F-Flortaucipir in Populations Matched for Age, MMSE and Brain Beta-Amyloid Burden
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Bourgeat, Pierrick, Krishnadas, N., Doré, V., Mulligan, R., Tyrrell, R., Bozinovski, S., Huang, K., Fripp, J., Villemagne, V. L., and Rowe, C. C.
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- 2023
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3. Harmonizing tau positron emission tomography in Alzheimer's disease: The CenTauR scale and the joint propagation model.
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Leuzy, A, Raket, LL, Villemagne, VL, Klein, G, Tonietto, M, Olafson, E, Baker, S, Saad, ZS, Bullich, S, Lopresti, B, Bohorquez, SS, Boada, M, Betthauser, TJ, Charil, A, Collins, EC, Collins, JA, Cullen, N, Gunn, RN, Higuchi, M, Hostetler, E, Hutchison, RM, Iaccarino, L, Insel, PS, Irizarry, MC, Jack, CR, Jagust, WJ, Johnson, KA, Johnson, SC, Karten, Y, Marquié, M, Mathotaarachchi, S, Mintun, MA, Ossenkoppele, R, Pappas, I, Petersen, RC, Rabinovici, GD, Rosa-Neto, P, Schwarz, CG, Smith, R, Stephens, AW, Whittington, A, Carrillo, MC, Pontecorvo, MJ, Haeberlein, SB, Dunn, B, Kolb, HC, Sivakumaran, S, Rowe, CC, Hansson, O, Doré, V, Leuzy, A, Raket, LL, Villemagne, VL, Klein, G, Tonietto, M, Olafson, E, Baker, S, Saad, ZS, Bullich, S, Lopresti, B, Bohorquez, SS, Boada, M, Betthauser, TJ, Charil, A, Collins, EC, Collins, JA, Cullen, N, Gunn, RN, Higuchi, M, Hostetler, E, Hutchison, RM, Iaccarino, L, Insel, PS, Irizarry, MC, Jack, CR, Jagust, WJ, Johnson, KA, Johnson, SC, Karten, Y, Marquié, M, Mathotaarachchi, S, Mintun, MA, Ossenkoppele, R, Pappas, I, Petersen, RC, Rabinovici, GD, Rosa-Neto, P, Schwarz, CG, Smith, R, Stephens, AW, Whittington, A, Carrillo, MC, Pontecorvo, MJ, Haeberlein, SB, Dunn, B, Kolb, HC, Sivakumaran, S, Rowe, CC, Hansson, O, and Doré, V
- Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Tau-positron emission tomography (PET) outcome data of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) cannot currently be meaningfully compared or combined when different tracers are used due to differences in tracer properties, instrumentation, and methods of analysis. METHODS: Using head-to-head data from five cohorts with tau PET radiotracers designed to target tau deposition in AD, we tested a joint propagation model (JPM) to harmonize quantification (units termed "CenTauR" [CTR]). JPM is a statistical model that simultaneously models the relationships between head-to-head and anchor point data. JPM was compared to a linear regression approach analogous to the one used in the amyloid PET Centiloid scale. RESULTS: A strong linear relationship was observed between CTR values across brain regions. Using the JPM approach, CTR estimates were similar to, but more accurate than, those derived using the linear regression approach. DISCUSSION: Preliminary findings using the JPM support the development and adoption of a universal scale for tau-PET quantification. HIGHLIGHTS: Tested a novel joint propagation model (JPM) to harmonize quantification of tau PET. Units of common scale are termed "CenTauRs". Tested a Centiloid-like linear regression approach. Using five cohorts with head-to-head tau PET, JPM outperformed linearregressionbased approach. Strong linear relationship was observed between CenTauRs values across brain regions.
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- 2024
4. Imaging of tau deposits in adults with Niemann-Pick type C disease: a case-control study
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Villemagne, Victor L., Velakoulis, D., Doré, V., Bozinoski, S., Masters, C. L., Rowe, C. C., and Walterfang, Mark
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- 2019
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5. Efficacy, safety, and effect on sexual behaviour of on-demand pre-exposure prophylaxis for HIV in men who have sex with men: an observational cohort study
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Meyer, L, Capitant, C, Charreau, I, Netzer, E, Leturque, N, Binesse, J, Foubert, V, Saouzanet, M, Euphrasie, F, Carette, D, Guillon, B, Saïdi, Y, Aboulker, J P, Spire, B, Suzan, M, Cattin, G, Demoulin, B, Sagaon-Teyssier, L, Lorente, N, Doré, V, Choucair, E, Le Mestre, S, Mennecier, A, Etien, N, Simon, M C, Diallo, A, Gibowski, S, Delfraissy, J F, Thompson, D, Sas, J, Pankovitch, J, Klein, M, Anis, A, Molina, Jean-Michel, Wainberg, Mark A, Trottier, Benoit, Tremblay, Cécile, Baril, Jean-Guy, Pialoux, Gilles, Cotte, Laurent, Chéret, Antoine, Pasquet, Armelle, Cua, Eric, Besnier, Michel, Rozenbaum, Willy, Chidiac, Christian, Delaugerre, Constance, Bajos, Nathalie, Timsit, Julie, Peytavin, Gilles, Fonsart, Julien, Durand-Zaleski, Isabelle, Meyer, Laurence, Aboulker, Jean-Pierre, Spire, Bruno, Suzan-Monti, Marie, Girard, Gabriel, Castro, Daniela Rojas, Préau, Marie, Morin, Michel, Thompson, David, Capitant, Catherine, Mennecier, Anaïs, Choucair, Elias, Doré, Véronique, Simon, Marie-Christine, Charreau, Isabelle, Otis, Joanne, Lert, France, Diallo, Alpha, Gibowski, Séverine, Rabian, Cecile, Chas, Julie, Tremblay, Cecile, Rojas-Castro, Daniela, Bernaud, Camille, Pintado, Claire, Sagaon-Teyssier, Luis, Mestre, Soizic Le, Ponscarme, Diane, and Doré, Veronique
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- 2017
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6. Definition of prepartum hyperketonemia in dairy goats
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Doré, V., Dubuc, J., Bélanger, A.M., and Buczinski, S.
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- 2015
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7. Changes in kidney function among men having sex with men starting on demand tenofovir disoproxil fumarate – emtricitabine for HIV pre‐exposure prophylaxis
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Liegeon, Geoffroy, Antoni, Guillemette, Pialoux, Gilles, Capitant, Catherine, Cotte, Laurent, Charreau, Isabelle, Tremblay, Cécile, Cua, Eric, Senneville, Eric, Raffi, François, Meyer, Laurence, Molina, Jean?Michel, Meyer, L, Capitant, C, Charreau, I, Netzer, E, Leturque, N, Binesse, J, Foubert, V, Saouzanet, M, Euphrasie, F, Carette, D, Guillon, B, Saïdi, Y, Aboulker, J P., Spire, B, Suzan, M, Cattin, G, Demoulin, B, Sagaon?Teyssier, L, Lorente, N, Doré, V, Choucair, E, Le Mestre, S, Mennecier, A, Etien, N, Simon, M C., Diallo, A, Gibowski, S, Delfraissy, J F., Thompson, D, Sas, J, Pankovitch, J, Klein, M, Anis, A, Wainberg, Mark A., Trottier, Benoit, Baril, Jean?Guy, Chéret, Antoine, Pasquet, Armelle, Hall, Nolwenn, Rozenbaum, Willy, Chidiac, Christian, Delaugerre, Constance, Bajos, Nathalie, Timsit, Julie, Peytavin, Gilles, Fonsart, Julien, Durand?Zaleski, Isabelle, Aboulker, Jean?Pierre, Spire, Bruno, Suzan?Monti, Marie, Girard, Gabriel, Castro, Daniela Rojas, Préau, Marie, Morin, Michel, Thompson, David, Mennecier, Anaïs, Choucair, Elias, Doré, Véronique, Simon, Marie?Christine, Otis, Joanne, Lert, France, Diallo, Alpha, Gibowski, Séverine, and Rabian, Cecile
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MSM (Men who have sex with men) -- Health aspects ,Tenofovir -- Patient outcomes ,Glomerular filtration rate -- Testing ,Emtricitabine -- Patient outcomes ,HIV infection -- Prevention ,Health - Abstract
: Introduction: Daily pre‐exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) with tenofovir disoproxil fumarate/emtricitabine (TDF/FTC) is associated with a small but statistically significant decrease in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR). We assessed the renal safety of on‐demand PrEP with TDF/FTC in HIV‐1 uninfected men. Methods: We used data from the randomized double‐blind placebo‐controlled ANRS‐IPERGAY trial and its open‐label extension conducted between February 2012 and June 2016 among HIV‐uninfected MSM starting on‐demand PrEP. Using linear mixed model, we evaluated the mean eGFR decline from baseline over time and determined risks factors associated with eGFR decline during the study. Results: During the blind phase, with a median follow‐up of 9.4 months, the mean decline slope of eGFR from baseline was −0.88 and −1.53 mL/min/1.73 m[sup.2] per year in the placebo (n = 201) and the TDF/FTC group (n = 198) respectively, with a slope difference of 0.65 mL/min/1.73 m[sup.2] per year (p = 0.27). Including both phases, 389 participants started on‐demand TDF/FTC with a median follow‐up of 19.2 months and a mean decline of eGFR from baseline of −1.14 mL/min/1.73 m[sup.2] per year (p < 0.001). The slope of eGFR reduction was not significantly different in participants with baseline eGFR ≤ 90 mL/min/1.73 m[sup.2] (p = 0.44), age >40 years (p = 0.24) or hypertension (p = 0.21). There was a dose‐response relationship between recent tenofovir exposure and lower eGFR when considering the number of pills taken in the two months prior the visit (eGFR difference of −0.88 mL/min/1.73 m[sup.2] between >15 pills/month vs. ≤15 pills/month, p < 0.01) or plasma tenofovir concentrations at the visit (eGFR difference compared to ≤2 ng/mL: >2 to ≤10ng/mL: −0.98 mL/min/1.73 m[sup.2], >10 to ≤40ng/mL: −1.28 mL/min/1.73 m[sup.2], >40 ng/mL: −1.82 mL/min/1.73 m[sup.2], p < 0.001). Three participants discontinued TDF/FTC for eGFR < 60 mL/min/1.73 m[sup.2] during the OLE phase. No case of Fanconi syndrome was reported. Conclusions: The renal safety of on‐demand PrEP with TDF/FTC was good. The overall reduction and intermittent exposure to TDF/FTC may explain this good renal safety., Introduction Pre‐exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) with tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) – emtricitabine (FTC) raises a lot of expectations to hamper HIV epidemic due to its high effectiveness to prevent HIV acquisition [...]
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- 2020
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8. Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Comparison of Tau Imaging with 18F-MK6240 and 18F-Flortaucipir in Populations Matched for Age, MMSE and Brain Beta-Amyloid Burden.
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Bourgeat, Pierrick, Krishnadas, N., Doré, V., Mulligan, R., Tyrrell, R., Bozinovski, S., Huang, K., Fripp, J., Villemagne, V. L., and Rowe, C. C.
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- 2023
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9. Fifteen years of the Australian Imaging, Biomarkers and Lifestyle (AIBL) Study: Progress and observations from 2,359 older adults spanning the spectrum from cognitive normality to Alzheimer’s Disease
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Fowler, C., Rainey-Smith, S.R., Bird, S., Bomke, J., Bourgeat, P., Brown, B.M., Burnham, S.C., Bush, A.I., Chadunow, C., Collins, S., Doecke, J., Doré, V., Ellis, K.A., Evered, L., Fazlollahi, A., Fripp, J., Gardener, S.L., Gibson, S., Grenfell, R., Harrison, E., Head, R., Jin, L., Kamer, A., Lamb, F., Lautenschlager, N.T., Laws, S.M., Li, Q-X, Lim, L., Lim, Y.Y., Louey, A., Macaulay, S.L., Mackintosh, L., Martins, R.N., Maruff, P., Masters, C.L., McBride, S., Milicic, L., Peretti, M., Pertile, K., Porter, T., Radler, M., Rembach, A., Robertson, J., Rodrigues, M., Rowe, C.C., Rumble, R., Salvado, O., Savage, G., Silbert, B., Soh, M., Sohrabi, H.R., Taddei, K., Taddei, T., Thai, C., Trounson, B., Tyrrell, R., Vacher, M., Varghese, S., Villemagne, V.L., Weinborn, M., Woodward, M., Xia, Y., Ames, D., Fowler, C., Rainey-Smith, S.R., Bird, S., Bomke, J., Bourgeat, P., Brown, B.M., Burnham, S.C., Bush, A.I., Chadunow, C., Collins, S., Doecke, J., Doré, V., Ellis, K.A., Evered, L., Fazlollahi, A., Fripp, J., Gardener, S.L., Gibson, S., Grenfell, R., Harrison, E., Head, R., Jin, L., Kamer, A., Lamb, F., Lautenschlager, N.T., Laws, S.M., Li, Q-X, Lim, L., Lim, Y.Y., Louey, A., Macaulay, S.L., Mackintosh, L., Martins, R.N., Maruff, P., Masters, C.L., McBride, S., Milicic, L., Peretti, M., Pertile, K., Porter, T., Radler, M., Rembach, A., Robertson, J., Rodrigues, M., Rowe, C.C., Rumble, R., Salvado, O., Savage, G., Silbert, B., Soh, M., Sohrabi, H.R., Taddei, K., Taddei, T., Thai, C., Trounson, B., Tyrrell, R., Vacher, M., Varghese, S., Villemagne, V.L., Weinborn, M., Woodward, M., Xia, Y., and Ames, D.
- Abstract
Background: The Australian Imaging, Biomarkers and Lifestyle (AIBL) Study commenced in 2006 as a prospective study of 1,112 individuals (768 cognitively normal (CN), 133 with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and 211 with Alzheimer’s disease dementia (AD)) as an ‘Inception cohort’ who underwent detailed ssessments every 18 months. Over the past decade, an additional 1247 subjects have been added as an ‘Enrichment cohort’ (as of 10 April 2019). Objective: Here we provide an overview of these Inception and Enrichment cohorts of more than 8,500 person-years of investigation. Methods: Participants underwent reassessment every 18 months including comprehensive cognitive testing, neuroimaging (magnetic resonance imaging, MRI; positron emission tomography, PET), biofluid biomarkers and lifestyle evaluations. Results: AIBL has made major contributions to the understanding of the natural history of AD, with cognitive and biological definitions of its three major stages: preclinical, prodromal and clinical. Early deployment of Aβ-amyloid and tau molecular PET imaging and the development of more sensitive and specific blood tests have facilitated the assessment of genetic and environmental factors which affect age at onset and rates of progression. Conclusion: This fifteen-year study provides a large database of highly characterized individuals with longitudinal cognitive, imaging and lifestyle data and biofluid collections, to aid in the development of interventions to delay onset, prevent or treat AD. Harmonization with similar large longitudinal cohort studies is underway to further these aims.
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- 2021
10. The effect of self-paced exercise intensity and cardiorespiratory fitness on frontal grey matter volume in cognitively normal older adults: A randomised controlled trial
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Frost, N.J., Weinborn, M., Gignac, G.E., Xia, Y., Doré, V., Rainey-Smith, S.R., Markovic, S., Gordon, N., Sohrabi, H.R., Laws, S.M., Martins, R.N., Peiffer, J.J., Brown, B.M., Frost, N.J., Weinborn, M., Gignac, G.E., Xia, Y., Doré, V., Rainey-Smith, S.R., Markovic, S., Gordon, N., Sohrabi, H.R., Laws, S.M., Martins, R.N., Peiffer, J.J., and Brown, B.M.
- Abstract
Objective: Exercise has been found to be important in maintaining neurocognitive health. However, the effect of exercise intensity level remains relatively underexplored. Thus, to test the hypothesis that self-paced high-intensity exercise and cardiorespiratory fitness (peak aerobic capacity; VO2peak) increase grey matter (GM) volume, we examined the effect of a 6-month exercise intervention on frontal lobe GM regions that support the executive functions in older adults. Methods: Ninety-eight cognitively normal participants (age = 69.06 ± 5.2 years; n = 54 female) were randomised into either a self-paced high- or moderate-intensity cycle-based exercise intervention group, or a no-intervention control group. Participants underwent magnetic resonance imaging and fitness assessment pre-intervention, immediately post-intervention, and 12-months post-intervention. Results: The intervention was found to increase fitness in the exercise groups, as compared with the control group (F = 9.88, p = <0.001). Changes in pre-to-post-intervention fitness were associated with increased volume in the right frontal lobe (β = 0.29, p = 0.036, r = 0.27), right supplementary motor area (β = 0.30, p = 0.031, r = 0.29), and both right (β = 0.32, p = 0.034, r = 0.30) and left gyrus rectus (β = 0.30, p = 0.037, r = 0.29) for intervention, but not control participants. No differences in volume were observed across groups. Conclusions: At an aggregate level, six months of self-paced high- or moderate-intensity exercise did not increase frontal GM volume. However, experimentally-induced changes in individual cardiorespiratory fitness was positively associated with frontal GM volume in our sample of older adults. These results provide evidence of individual variability in exercise-induced fitness on brain structure.
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- 2021
11. Diagnostic and prognostic plasma biomarkers for preclinical Alzheimer's disease
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Chatterjee, P., Pedrini, S., Ashton, N.J., Tegg, M., Goozee, K., Singh, A.K., Karikari, T.K., Simrén, J., Vanmechelen, E., Armstrong, N.J., Hone, E., Asih, P.R., Taddei, K., Doré, V., Villemagne, V.L., Sohrabi, H.R., Zetterberg, H., Masters, C.L., Blennow, K., Martins, R.N., Chatterjee, P., Pedrini, S., Ashton, N.J., Tegg, M., Goozee, K., Singh, A.K., Karikari, T.K., Simrén, J., Vanmechelen, E., Armstrong, N.J., Hone, E., Asih, P.R., Taddei, K., Doré, V., Villemagne, V.L., Sohrabi, H.R., Zetterberg, H., Masters, C.L., Blennow, K., and Martins, R.N.
- Abstract
Introduction This study involved a parallel comparison of the diagnostic and longitudinal monitoring potential of plasma glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), total tau (t-tau), phosphorylated tau (p-tau181 and p-tau231), and neurofilament light (NFL) in preclinical Alzheimer's disease (AD). Methods Plasma proteins were measured using Simoa assays in cognitively unimpaired older adults (CU), with either absence (Aβ−) or presence (Aβ+) of brain amyloidosis. Results Plasma GFAP, t-tau, p-tau181, and p-tau231 concentrations were higher in Aβ+ CU compared with Aβ− CU cross-sectionally. GFAP had the highest effect size and area under the curve (AUC) in differentiating between Aβ+ and Aβ− CU; however, no statistically significant differences were observed between the AUCs of GFAP, p-tau181, and p-tau231, but all were significantly higher than the AUC of NFL, and the AUC of GFAP was higher than the AUC of t-tau. The combination of a base model (BM), comprising the AD risk factors, age, sex, and apolipoprotein E gene (APOE) ε4 status with GFAP was observed to have a higher AUC (>90%) compared with the combination of BM with any of the other proteins investigated in the current study. Longitudinal analyses showed increased GFAP and p-tau181 in Aβ+ CU and increased NFL in Aβ− CU, over a 12-month duration. GFAP, p-tau181, p-tau231, and NFL showed significant correlations with cognition, whereas no significant correlations were observed with hippocampal volume. Discussion These findings highlight the diagnostic and longitudinal monitoring potential of GFAP and p-tau for preclinical AD.
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- 2021
12. Association of β-amyloid level, clinical progression and longitudinal cognitive change in normal older individuals
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van der Kall, L.M., Truong, T., Burnham, S.C., Doré, V., Mulligan, R.S., Bozinovski, S., Lamb, F., Bourgeat, P., Fripp, J., Schultz, S., Lim, Y.Y., Laws, S.M., Ames, D., Fowler, C., Rainey-Smith, S.R., Martins, R.N., Salvado, O., Robertson, J., Maruff, P., Masters, C.L., Villemagne, V.L., Rowe, C.C., van der Kall, L.M., Truong, T., Burnham, S.C., Doré, V., Mulligan, R.S., Bozinovski, S., Lamb, F., Bourgeat, P., Fripp, J., Schultz, S., Lim, Y.Y., Laws, S.M., Ames, D., Fowler, C., Rainey-Smith, S.R., Martins, R.N., Salvado, O., Robertson, J., Maruff, P., Masters, C.L., Villemagne, V.L., and Rowe, C.C.
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Objective To determine the effect of β-amyloid (Aβ) level on progression risk to mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or dementia and longitudinal cognitive change in cognitively normal (CN) older individuals. Methods All CN from the Australian Imaging Biomarkers and Lifestyle study with Aβ PET and ≥3 years follow-up were included (n = 534; age 72 ± 6 years; 27% Aβ positive; follow-up 5.3 ± 1.7 years). Aβ level was divided using the standardized 0–100 Centiloid scale: <15 CL negative, 15–25 CL uncertain, 26–50 CL moderate, 51–100 CL high, >100 CL very high, noting >25 CL approximates a positive scan. Cox proportional hazards analysis and linear mixed effect models were used to assess risk of progression and cognitive decline. Results Aβ levels in 63% were negative, 10% uncertain, 10% moderate, 14% high, and 3% very high. Fifty-seven (11%) progressed to MCI or dementia. Compared to negative Aβ, the hazard ratio for progression for moderate Aβ was 3.2 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.3–7.6; p < 0.05), for high was 7.0 (95% CI 3.7–13.3; p < 0.001), and for very high was 11.4 (95% CI 5.1–25.8; p < 0.001). Decline in cognitive composite score was minimal in the moderate group (−0.02 SD/year, p = 0.05), while the high and very high declined substantially (high −0.08 SD/year, p < 0.001; very high −0.35 SD/year, p < 0.001). Conclusion The risk of MCI or dementia over 5 years in older CN is related to Aβ level on PET, 5% if negative vs 25% if positive but ranging from 12% if 26–50 CL to 28% if 51–100 CL and 50% if >100 CL. This information may be useful for dementia risk counseling and aid design of preclinical AD trials.
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- 2020
13. Comparison of oral, intravenous, and subcutaneous fluid therapy for resuscitation of calves with diarrhea
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Doré, V., primary, Foster, D.M., additional, Ru, H., additional, and Smith, G.W., additional
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- 2019
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14. KIBRA is associated with accelerated cognitive decline and hippocampal atrophy in APOE ε4-positive cognitively normal adults with high Aβ-amyloid burden
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Porter, T., Burnham, S.C., Doré, V., Savage, G., Bourgeat, P., Begemann, K., Milicic, L., Ames, D., Bush, A.I., Maruff, P., Masters, C.L., Rowe, C.C., Rainey-Smith, S., Martins, R.N., Groth, D., Verdile, G., Villemagne, V.L., Laws, S.M., Porter, T., Burnham, S.C., Doré, V., Savage, G., Bourgeat, P., Begemann, K., Milicic, L., Ames, D., Bush, A.I., Maruff, P., Masters, C.L., Rowe, C.C., Rainey-Smith, S., Martins, R.N., Groth, D., Verdile, G., Villemagne, V.L., and Laws, S.M.
- Abstract
A single nucleotide polymorphism, rs17070145, in the KIdney and BRAin expressed protein (KIBRA) gene has been associated with cognition and hippocampal volume in cognitively normal (CN) individuals. However, the impact of rs17070145 on longitudinal cognitive decline and hippocampal atrophy in CN adults at greatest risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease is unknown. We investigated the impact rs17070145 has on the rate of cognitive decline and hippocampal atrophy over six years in 602 CN adults, with known brain Aβ-amyloid levels and whether there is an interactive effect with APOE genotype. We reveal that whilst limited independent effects of KIBRA genotype were observed, there was an interaction with APOE in CN adults who presented with high Aβ-amyloid levels across study duration. In comparison to APOE ε4-ve individuals carrying the rs17070145-T allele, significantly faster rates of cognitive decline (global, p = 0.006; verbal episodic memory, p = 0.004), and hippocampal atrophy (p = 0.04) were observed in individuals who were APOE ε4 + ve and did not carry the rs17070145-T allele. The observation of APOE effects in only non-carriers of the rs17070145-T allele, in the presence of high Aβ-amyloid suggest that carriers of the rs17070145-T allele are conferred a level of resilience to the detrimental effects of high Aβ-amyloid and APOE ε4.
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- 2018
15. Trajectories of depressive and anxiety symptoms in older adults: a 6-year prospective cohort study
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Holmes, S., Esterlis, I., Mazure, C., Lim, Y., Ames, D., Rainey-Smith, S., Fowler, C., Ellis, K., Martins, R., Salvado, O., Doré, V., Villemagne, V., Rowe, C., Laws, Simon, Masters, C., Pietrzak, R., Maruff, P., Holmes, S., Esterlis, I., Mazure, C., Lim, Y., Ames, D., Rainey-Smith, S., Fowler, C., Ellis, K., Martins, R., Salvado, O., Doré, V., Villemagne, V., Rowe, C., Laws, Simon, Masters, C., Pietrzak, R., and Maruff, P.
- Abstract
Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Objective: Depressive and anxiety symptoms are common in older adults, significantly affect quality of life, and are risk factors for Alzheimer's disease. We sought to identify the determinants of predominant trajectories of depressive and anxiety symptoms in cognitively normal older adults. Method: Four hundred twenty-three older adults recruited from the general community underwent Aß positron emission tomography imaging, apolipoprotein and brain-derived neurotrophic factor genotyping, and cognitive testing at baseline and had follow-up assessments. All participants were cognitively normal and free of clinical depression at baseline. Latent growth mixture modeling was used to identify predominant trajectories of subthreshold depressive and anxiety symptoms over 6 years. Binary logistic regression analysis was used to identify baseline predictors of symptomatic depressive and anxiety trajectories. Results: Latent growth mixture modeling revealed two predominant trajectories of depressive and anxiety symptoms: a chronically elevated trajectory and a low, stable symptom trajectory, with almost one in five participants falling into the elevated trajectory groups. Male sex (relative risk ratio (RRR) = 3.23), lower attentional function (RRR = 1.90), and carriage of the brain-derived neurotrophic factor Val66Met allele in women (RRR = 2.70) were associated with increased risk for chronically elevated depressive symptom trajectory. Carriage of the apolipoprotein epsilon 4 allele (RRR = 1.92) and lower executive function in women (RRR = 1.74) were associated with chronically elevated anxiety symptom trajectory. Conclusion: Our results indicate distinct and sex-specific risk factors linked to depressive and anxiety trajectories, which may help inform risk stratification and management of these symptoms in older adults at risk for Alzheimer's disease. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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- 2018
16. Amyloid β–associated cognitive decline in the absence of clinical disease progression and systemic illness
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Harrington, K.D., Lim, Y.Y., Ames, D., Hassenstab, J., Laws, S.M., Martins, R.N., Rainey‐Smith, S., Robertson, J., Rowe, C.C., Salvado, O., Doré, V., Villemagne, V.L., Snyder, P.J., Masters, C.L., Maruff, P., Harrington, K.D., Lim, Y.Y., Ames, D., Hassenstab, J., Laws, S.M., Martins, R.N., Rainey‐Smith, S., Robertson, J., Rowe, C.C., Salvado, O., Doré, V., Villemagne, V.L., Snyder, P.J., Masters, C.L., and Maruff, P.
- Abstract
Introduction High levels of amyloid β (Aβ) are associated with cognitive decline in cognitively normal (CN) older adults. This study investigated the nature of cognitive decline in healthy individuals who did not progress to mild cognitive impairment or dementia. Method Cognition was measured over 72 months and compared between low (Aβ−) and high (Aβ+) CN older adults (n = 335) who did not progress to mild cognitive impairment or dementia and who remained free of severe or uncontrolled systemic illness. Results Compared to the Aβ− group, the Aβ+ group showed no cognitive impairment at baseline but showed substantial decline in verbal learning, episodic memory, and attention over 72 months. Discussion Moderate cognitive decline, particularly for learning and memory, was associated with Aβ+ in CN older adults in the absence of clinical disease progression and uncontrolled or serious comorbid illness.
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- 2017
17. Trajectories of depressive and anxiety symptoms in older adults: A 6-year prospective cohort study
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Holmes, S.E., Esterlis, I., Mazure, C.M., Lim, Y.Y., Ames, D., Rainey-Smith, S., Fowler, C., Ellis, K., Martins, R.N., Salvado, O., Doré, V., Villemagne, V.L., Rowe, C.C., Laws, S.M., Masters, C.L., Pietrzak, R.H., Maruff, P., Holmes, S.E., Esterlis, I., Mazure, C.M., Lim, Y.Y., Ames, D., Rainey-Smith, S., Fowler, C., Ellis, K., Martins, R.N., Salvado, O., Doré, V., Villemagne, V.L., Rowe, C.C., Laws, S.M., Masters, C.L., Pietrzak, R.H., and Maruff, P.
- Abstract
Objective: Depressive and anxiety symptoms are common in older adults, significantly affect quality of life, and are risk factors for Alzheimer's disease. We sought to identify the determinants of predominant trajectories of depressive and anxiety symptoms in cognitively normal older adults. Method: Four hundred twenty-three older adults recruited from the general community underwent Aβ positron emission tomography imaging, apolipoprotein and brain-derived neurotrophic factor genotyping, and cognitive testing at baseline and had follow-up assessments. All participants were cognitively normal and free of clinical depression at baseline. Latent growth mixture modeling was used to identify predominant trajectories of subthreshold depressive and anxiety symptoms over 6 years. Binary logistic regression analysis was used to identify baseline predictors of symptomatic depressive and anxiety trajectories. Results: Latent growth mixture modeling revealed two predominant trajectories of depressive and anxiety symptoms: a chronically elevated trajectory and a low, stable symptom trajectory, with almost one in five participants falling into the elevated trajectory groups. Male sex (relative risk ratio (RRR) = 3.23), lower attentional function (RRR = 1.90), and carriage of the brain-derived neurotrophic factor Val66Met allele in women (RRR = 2.70) were associated with increased risk for chronically elevated depressive symptom trajectory. Carriage of the apolipoprotein epsilon 4 allele (RRR = 1.92) and lower executive function in women (RRR = 1.74) were associated with chronically elevated anxiety symptom trajectory. Conclusion: Our results indicate distinct and sex-specific risk factors linked to depressive and anxiety trajectories, which may help inform risk stratification and management of these symptoms in older adults at risk for Alzheimer's disease.
- Published
- 2017
18. Insulin resistance is associated with reductions in specific cognitive domains and increases in CSF tau in cognitively normal adults
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Laws, S.M., Gaskin, S., Woodfield, A., Srikanth, V., Bruce, D., Fraser, P.E., Porter, T., Newsholme, P., Wijesekara, N., Burnham, S., Doré, V., Li, Q-X, Maruff, P., Masters, C.L., Rainey-Smith, S., Rowe, C.C., Salvado, O., Villemagne, V.L., Martins, R.N., Verdile, G., Laws, S.M., Gaskin, S., Woodfield, A., Srikanth, V., Bruce, D., Fraser, P.E., Porter, T., Newsholme, P., Wijesekara, N., Burnham, S., Doré, V., Li, Q-X, Maruff, P., Masters, C.L., Rainey-Smith, S., Rowe, C.C., Salvado, O., Villemagne, V.L., Martins, R.N., and Verdile, G.
- Abstract
Growing evidence supports the hypothesis that type 2 diabetes (T2D) increases the risk of developing dementia. Experimental evidence from mouse models demonstrates that the induction of T2D/insulin resistance (IR) can promote the accumulation of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pathological features. However, the association of T2D with pathological and clinical phenotypes in humans is unclear. Here we investigate the relationship of indices of IR (HOMA-IR) and pancreatic β-cell function (HOMA-B) with cognitive performance across several domains (Verbal/Visual Episodic Memory, Executive Function, Language and a measure of Global cognition) and AD biomarkers (CSF Aβ42, T-tau/P-tau, hippocampal volume and neocortical Aβ-amyloid burden). We reveal that HOMA-IR (p < 0.001) incrementally increases across diagnostic groups, becoming significantly elevated in the AD group compared with cognitively normal (CN) adults. In CN adults, higher HOMA-IR was associated with poorer performance on measures of verbal episodic memory (p = 0.010), executive function (p = 0.046) and global cognition (p = 0.007), as well as with higher CSF T-tau (p = 0.008) and P-tau (p = 0.014) levels. No association was observed with CSF Aβ or imaging modalities. Together our data suggest that IR may contribute to reduced cognitive performance and the accumulation of CSF tau biomarkers in cognitively normal adults.
- Published
- 2017
19. Amyloid ß–associated cognitive decline in the absence of clinical disease progression and systemic illness
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Harrington, K., Lim, Y., Ames, D., Hassenstab, J., Laws, Simon, Martins, R., Rainey-Smith, S., Robertson, J., Rowe, C., Salvado, O., Doré, V., Villemagne, V., Snyder, P., Masters, C., Maruff, P., Harrington, K., Lim, Y., Ames, D., Hassenstab, J., Laws, Simon, Martins, R., Rainey-Smith, S., Robertson, J., Rowe, C., Salvado, O., Doré, V., Villemagne, V., Snyder, P., Masters, C., and Maruff, P.
- Abstract
© 2017 The Authors Introduction High levels of amyloid ß (Aß) are associated with cognitive decline in cognitively normal (CN) older adults. This study investigated the nature of cognitive decline in healthy individuals who did not progress to mild cognitive impairment or dementia. Method Cognition was measured over 72 months and compared between low (Aß-) and high (Aß+) CN older adults (n = 335) who did not progress to mild cognitive impairment or dementia and who remained free of severe or uncontrolled systemic illness. Results Compared to the Aß- group, the Aß+ group showed no cognitive impairment at baseline but showed substantial decline in verbal learning, episodic memory, and attention over 72 months. Discussion Moderate cognitive decline, particularly for learning and memory, was associated with Aß+ in CN older adults in the absence of clinical disease progression and uncontrolled or serious comorbid illness.
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- 2017
20. Insulin resistance is associated with reductions in specific cognitive domains and increases in CSF tau in cognitively normal adults
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Laws, S., Gaskin, S., Woodfield, A., Srikanth, V., Bruce, D., Fraser, P., Porter, T., Newsholme, Philip, Wijesekara, N., Burnham, S., Doré, V., Li, Q., Maruff, P., Masters, C., Rainey-Smith, S., Rowe, C., Salvado, O., Villemagne, V., Martins, R., Verdile, Giuseppe, Laws, S., Gaskin, S., Woodfield, A., Srikanth, V., Bruce, D., Fraser, P., Porter, T., Newsholme, Philip, Wijesekara, N., Burnham, S., Doré, V., Li, Q., Maruff, P., Masters, C., Rainey-Smith, S., Rowe, C., Salvado, O., Villemagne, V., Martins, R., and Verdile, Giuseppe
- Abstract
Growing evidence supports the hypothesis that type 2 diabetes (T2D) increases the risk of developing dementia. Experimental evidence from mouse models demonstrates that the induction of T2D/insulin resistance (IR) can promote the accumulation of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathological features. However, the association of T2D with pathological and clinical phenotypes in humans is unclear. Here we investigate the relationship of indices of IR (HOMA-IR) and pancreatic ß-cell function (HOMA-B) with cognitive performance across several domains (Verbal/Visual Episodic Memory, Executive Function, Language and a measure of Global cognition) and AD biomarkers (CSF Aß42, T-tau/P-tau, hippocampal volume and neocortical Aß-amyloid burden). We reveal that HOMA-IR (p < 0.001) incrementally increases across diagnostic groups, becoming significantly elevated in the AD group compared with cognitively normal (CN) adults. In CN adults, higher HOMA-IR was associated with poorer performance on measures of verbal episodic memory (p = 0.010), executive function (p = 0.046) and global cognition (p = 0.007), as well as with higher CSF T-tau (p = 0.008) and P-tau (p = 0.014) levels. No association was observed with CSF Aß or imaging modalities. Together our data suggest that IR may contribute to reduced cognitive performance and the accumulation of CSF tau biomarkers in cognitively normal adults.
- Published
- 2017
21. Efficacy, safety, and effect on sexual behaviour of on-demand pre-exposure prophylaxis for HIV in men who have sex with men: an observational cohort study
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Molina, Jean-Michel, primary, Charreau, Isabelle, additional, Spire, Bruno, additional, Cotte, Laurent, additional, Chas, Julie, additional, Capitant, Catherine, additional, Tremblay, Cecile, additional, Rojas-Castro, Daniela, additional, Cua, Eric, additional, Pasquet, Armelle, additional, Bernaud, Camille, additional, Pintado, Claire, additional, Delaugerre, Constance, additional, Sagaon-Teyssier, Luis, additional, Mestre, Soizic Le, additional, Chidiac, Christian, additional, Pialoux, Gilles, additional, Ponscarme, Diane, additional, Fonsart, Julien, additional, Thompson, David, additional, Wainberg, Mark A, additional, Doré, Veronique, additional, Meyer, Laurence, additional, Meyer, L, additional, Capitant, C, additional, Charreau, I, additional, Netzer, E, additional, Leturque, N, additional, Binesse, J, additional, Foubert, V, additional, Saouzanet, M, additional, Euphrasie, F, additional, Carette, D, additional, Guillon, B, additional, Saïdi, Y, additional, Aboulker, J P, additional, Spire, B, additional, Suzan, M, additional, Cattin, G, additional, Demoulin, B, additional, Sagaon-Teyssier, L, additional, Lorente, N, additional, Doré, V, additional, Choucair, E, additional, Le Mestre, S, additional, Mennecier, A, additional, Etien, N, additional, Simon, M C, additional, Diallo, A, additional, Gibowski, S, additional, Delfraissy, J F, additional, Thompson, D, additional, Sas, J, additional, Pankovitch, J, additional, Klein, M, additional, Anis, A, additional, Molina, Jean-Michel, additional, Trottier, Benoit, additional, Tremblay, Cécile, additional, Baril, Jean-Guy, additional, Chéret, Antoine, additional, Besnier, Michel, additional, Rozenbaum, Willy, additional, Bajos, Nathalie, additional, Timsit, Julie, additional, Peytavin, Gilles, additional, Durand-Zaleski, Isabelle, additional, Aboulker, Jean-Pierre, additional, Suzan-Monti, Marie, additional, Girard, Gabriel, additional, Castro, Daniela Rojas, additional, Préau, Marie, additional, Morin, Michel, additional, Mennecier, Anaïs, additional, Choucair, Elias, additional, Doré, Véronique, additional, Simon, Marie-Christine, additional, Otis, Joanne, additional, Lert, France, additional, Diallo, Alpha, additional, Gibowski, Séverine, additional, and Rabian, Cecile, additional
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- 2017
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22. Imaging of tau deposits in adults with Niemann-Pick type C disease: a case-control study.
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Bozinoski, S., Villemagne, Victor L., Rowe, C. C., Doré, V., Masters, C. L., Walterfang, Mark, and Velakoulis, D.
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NIEMANN-Pick diseases ,AMYLOID ,MILD cognitive impairment ,SEVERITY of illness index ,LYSOSOMES - Abstract
Purpose: Niemann-Pick type C (NPC) is a cholesterol storage disease characterized by disruption in the endosomal–lysosomal transport system that leads to the accumulation of cholesterol and glycolipids in lysosomes. Developmental cognitive delay and progressive motor and cognitive impairment are characteristic of the disease. Tau accumulation has been reported in some NPC patients. We investigated the presence of tau and Aβ-amyloid deposits in a group of NPC patients and for comparison in age-matched healthy controls (HC). Methods: Eight NPC patients and seven HC were included in the study. Participants underwent tau imaging with
18 F-AV1451 and amyloid imaging with11 C-PiB. Both18 F-AV1451 and11 C-PiB standardized uptake value ratios were generated using the cerebellar cortex as the reference region. Associations between imaging results, and clinical and neurocognitive parameters were assessed through nonparametric analyses. Results: All participants were Aβ-negative. Four NPC patients presented with high tau burden in the brain. A 21-year-old female patient and a 40-year-old male patient showed high neocortical tau burden in a pattern different from that observed in patients with Alzheimer's disease, while the same 40-year-old male patient, a 40-year-old female patient and a 50-year-old female patient showed high regional tau burden in the mesial temporal cortex. Spearman's correlation analysis showed an association between tau burden in the mesial temporal lobe and age (p = 0.022), and age at symptom onset (p = 0.009), and between frontotemporal tau and duration of symptoms (p = 0.027). There were no correlations between global and regional tau and cognitive parameters. Conclusion: Four of eight NPC patients showed tau deposition in the brain. The results of our exploratory study suggest that while tau deposits do not affect cognitive performance, tau deposits are associated with measures of disease onset and progression. Further studies in a larger cohort of NPC patients are needed to confirm these initial findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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23. β-Amyloid, APOE and BDNF genotype, and depressive and anxiety symptoms in cognitively normal older women and men
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Holmes, S.E., Esterlis, I., Mazure, C.M., Lim, Y.Y., Ames, D., Rainey-Smith, S., Martins, R.N., Salvado, O., Doré, V., Villemagne, V.L., Rowe, C.C., Laws, S.M., Masters, C.L., Maruff, P., Pietrzak, R.H., Holmes, S.E., Esterlis, I., Mazure, C.M., Lim, Y.Y., Ames, D., Rainey-Smith, S., Martins, R.N., Salvado, O., Doré, V., Villemagne, V.L., Rowe, C.C., Laws, S.M., Masters, C.L., Maruff, P., and Pietrzak, R.H.
- Abstract
Objective To examine how β-amyloid (Aβ), APOE and BDNF genotypes, and cortisol relate to depressive and anxiety symptoms in cognitively normal older women and men. Methods Cross-sectional data were analyzed from 423 older adults from the Australian Imaging Biomarkers and Lifestyle study. Analyses of covariance evaluated associations between Aβ, APOE and BDNF genotype, and cortisol in relation to severity of depressive and anxiety symptoms. Results Among Aβ+ older adults, APOE ε4 carriage was associated with greater severity of anxiety symptoms (d = 0.55); and in the full sample, APOE ε4 carriage was linked to greater severity of depressive (d = 0.26) and anxiety (d = 0.21) symptoms. Among Aβ+ women, ε4 carriers reported greater anxiety symptoms than non-ε4 carriers (d = 0.83), and female BDNF rs6265 Val66 Met allele carriers reported greater depressive symptoms (d = 0.29). Conclusion Sex moderated the relationship between Aβ, APOE genotype, and BDNF genotype in predicting severity of anxiety and depressive symptoms in cognitively normal older adults.
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- 2016
24. Optimization of the Energy Usage at CERN
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Burckhart, H J, Burnet, J P, Caspers, F, Doré, V, Gatignon, L, Martel, C, Nonis, M, and Tommasini, D
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Physics::Accelerator Physics ,Accelerators and Storage Rings - Abstract
Some of the efforts of CERN to optimize its energy usage are presented. Work is proceeding in several areas: campus and infrastructure, accelerators and beam lines, as well as R&D for future accelerators. The existing building stock is being renovated and new buildings apply an integrated energy concept. The energy efficiency of the accelerators and beam lines can be further enhanced by powering more equipment dynamically only during the time it is really needed. For designing new accelerators novel approaches are being investigated to re-use energy which in today’s installations gets dumped thermally.
- Published
- 2013
25. Adaptations of MARACAS algorithm to the segmentation of the carotid bifurcation and stenosis quantification in CTA images
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Zuluaga, M.A., Orkisz, Maciej, Delgado Leyton, E. J. F., Doré, V., Morales Pinzón, A., HernÁndez Hoyos, M., Grupo IMAGINE, Universidad de los Andes [Bogota] (UNIANDES), Centre de Recherche en Acquisition et Traitement de l'Image pour la Santé (CREATIS), Université Jean Monnet [Saint-Étienne] (UJM)-Hospices Civils de Lyon (HCL)-Institut National des Sciences Appliquées de Lyon (INSA Lyon), Université de Lyon-Institut National des Sciences Appliquées (INSA)-Université de Lyon-Institut National des Sciences Appliquées (INSA)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Imagerie et modélisation Vasculaires, Thoraciques et Cérébrales (MOTIVATE), and Université de Lyon-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Jean Monnet [Saint-Étienne] (UJM)-Hospices Civils de Lyon (HCL)-Institut National des Sciences Appliquées de Lyon (INSA Lyon)
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[INFO.INFO-IM]Computer Science [cs]/Medical Imaging ,[SPI.SIGNAL]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Signal and Image processing ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS - Abstract
This paper describes a 3D CTA image segmentation method submitted to the CLS09 contest (Carotid Lumen Segmentation and Stenosis Quantification) held in conjunction with the MICCAI 2009 conference. First, images are denoised to improve image quality and posterior segmentation. Second, region-based measurements are performed to differentiate possible vessels from other structures. Then, edge-driven metrics are used to allow vessel separation from nearby structures. Using, both edge-driven and region-based metrics a filter is used to enhance the vessels. The vessels of interest are extracted by use of the provided initialization points and of a model-driven segmentation algorithm. Using the obtained result, the final stage is devoted to stenosis quantification.
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- 2010
26. Adaptación del algoritmo MARACAS para la segmentación de la bifurcación de la arteria carótida y cuantificación de estenosis en imágenes TAC
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Zuluaga, M.A., Orkisz, Maciej, Delgado Leyton, E. J. F., Doré, V., Morales Pinzón, A., HernÁndez Hoyos, M., Grupo IMAGINE, Universidad de los Andes [Bogota] (UNIANDES), Centre de Recherche en Acquisition et Traitement de l'Image pour la Santé (CREATIS), Université Jean Monnet [Saint-Étienne] (UJM)-Hospices Civils de Lyon (HCL)-Institut National des Sciences Appliquées de Lyon (INSA Lyon), Université de Lyon-Institut National des Sciences Appliquées (INSA)-Université de Lyon-Institut National des Sciences Appliquées (INSA)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Imagerie et modélisation Vasculaires, Thoraciques et Cérébrales (MOTIVATE), and Université de Lyon-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Jean Monnet [Saint-Étienne] (UJM)-Hospices Civils de Lyon (HCL)-Institut National des Sciences Appliquées de Lyon (INSA Lyon)
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[INFO.INFO-IM]Computer Science [cs]/Medical Imaging ,[SPI.SIGNAL]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Signal and Image processing ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS - Abstract
International audience
- Published
- 2010
27. En Attendant Centiloid
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Villemagne, V.L., Doré, V., Yates, P., Brown, B., Mulligan, R., Bourgeat, P., Veljanoski, R., Rainey-Smith, S.R., Ong, K., Rembach, A., Williams, R., Burnham, S.C., Laws, S.M., Salvado, O., Taddei, K., Macaulay, S.L., Martins, R.N., Ames, D., Masters, C.L., Rowe, C.C., Villemagne, V.L., Doré, V., Yates, P., Brown, B., Mulligan, R., Bourgeat, P., Veljanoski, R., Rainey-Smith, S.R., Ong, K., Rembach, A., Williams, R., Burnham, S.C., Laws, S.M., Salvado, O., Taddei, K., Macaulay, S.L., Martins, R.N., Ames, D., Masters, C.L., and Rowe, C.C.
- Abstract
Aims: Test the robustness of a linear regression transformation of semiquantitative values from different Aβ tracers into a single continuous scale. Study Design: Retrospective analysis. Place and Duration of Study: PET imaging data acquired in Melbourne and Perth, Australia, between August 2006 and May 2014. Methodology: Aβ imaging in 633 participants was performed with four different radiotracers: flutemetamol (n=267), florbetapir (n=195), florbetaben (n=126) and NAV4694 (n=45). SUVR were generated with the methods recommended for each tracer, and classified as high (Aβ+) or low (Aβ-) based on their respective thresholds. Linear regression transformation based on reported head-to-head comparisons of each tracer with PiB was applied to each tracer result. Each tracer native classification was compared with the classification derived from the transformed data into PiB-like SUVR units (or BeCKeT: Before the Centiloid Kernel Transformation) using 1.50 as a cut-off. Results: Misclassification after transformation to PiB-like SUVR compared to native classification was extremely low with only 3/267 (1.1%) of flutemetamol, 1/195 (0.5%) of florbetapir, 1/45 (2.2%) of NAV4694, and 1/126 (0.8%) of florbetaben cases assigned into the wrong category. When misclassification occurred (<1% of all cases) it was restricted to an extremely narrow margin (±0.02 BeCKeT) around the 1.50 BeCKeT threshold. Conclusion: While a definitive transformation into centesimal units is being established, application of linear regression transformations provide an interim, albeit robust, way of converting results from different Aβ imaging tracers into more familiar PiB-like SUVR units.
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- 2014
28. Short communication: Evaluation of the accuracy of an electronic on-farm test to quantify blood β-hydroxybutyrate concentration in dairy goats
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Doré, V., primary, Dubuc, J., additional, Bélanger, A.M., additional, and Buczinski, S., additional
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- 2013
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29. Automatic operations for the CRAY XMP48 under Unicos
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Doré, V and Petrilli, A
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Computing and Computers - Published
- 1990
30. Adaptation of the MARACAS algorithm for carotid artery segmentation and stenosis quantification on CT images,Adaptación del algoritmo MARACAS para segmentación de la arteria carótida y cuantificación de estenosis en imágenes TAC
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Maria A. Zuluaga, Orkisz, M., Delgado, E. J. F., Doré, V., Pinzón, A. M., and Hoyos, M. H.
31. Detection and staging of Alzheimer's disease by plasma pTau217 on a high throughput immunoassay platform.
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Feizpour A, Doecke JD, Doré V, Krishnadas N, Huang K, Bourgeat P, Laws SM, Fowler C, Robertson J, Mackintosh L, Ayton S, Martins R, Rainey-Smith SR, Taddei K, Ward L, Stage E, Bannon AW, Masters CL, Fripp J, Villemagne VL, and Rowe CC
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- Humans, Female, Male, Aged, Immunoassay methods, Middle Aged, ROC Curve, Phosphorylation, Aged, 80 and over, High-Throughput Screening Assays methods, Alzheimer Disease blood, Alzheimer Disease diagnosis, tau Proteins blood, tau Proteins metabolism, Biomarkers blood, Positron-Emission Tomography methods, Amyloid beta-Peptides blood, Amyloid beta-Peptides metabolism
- Abstract
Background: Plasma phospho-tau 217 (pTau217) assays can accurately detect Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology, but clinical application is limited by the need for specialised equipment. This study tests the performance of a plasma pTau217 assay performed on the Lumipulse-G® platform, that is in widespread clinical use, for selecting patients for therapy based on β-amyloid (Aβ) status and tau staging., Methods: Participants included 388 individuals with
18 F-NAV4694 Aβ-PET and18 F-MK6240 tau-PET. Association of pTau217 with PET was examined using Spearman's correlation. Discriminative performance for Aβ and tau PET status as well as tau staging was assessed using Receiver Operating Characteristic analysis., Findings: Plasma pTau217 had a high correlation with both Aβ Centiloid (r = 0.76) and tau SUVRmeta-temporal (r = 0.78). Area under curve (AUC) was 0.93 for Aβ- vs Aβ+ and 0.94 for tau- vs tau+. Applying one threshold (Youden's index), pTau217 was 87% accurate in classification of participants to Aβ- vs Aβ+. Applying two thresholds to classify participants into Low, Indeterminate, and High zones, 17.8% had Indeterminate results and among Low/High zone participants, 92% were correctly classified as Aβ- or Aβ+. The assay accurately discriminated moderate/high neocortical tau from no tau or tau limited to mesial-temporal lobe (AUC 0.97) and high neocortical tau from all others (AUC 0.94)., Interpretation: Plasma pTau217, measured by the widely-available, fully-automated Lumipulse®, was a strong predictor of both Aβ and tau PET status and demonstrated strong predictive power in identifying individuals likely to benefit the most from anti-Aβ treatments., Funding: NHMRC grants 1132604, 1140853, 1152623 and AbbVie., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests CCR has received research grants from NHMRC, Enigma Australia, Biogen, Eisai and Abbvie. He is on the scientific advisory board for Cerveau Technologies and has consulted for Prothena, Eisai, Roche, and Biogen Australia. VLV has received a grant from NIA and is and has been a consultant or paid speaker at sponsored conference sessions for Eli Lilly, Life Molecular Imaging, ACE Barcelona, and BRI Japan. ES and AWB are employees of Abbvie. SML is a scientific advisor for Cytox Ltd. SA has received grants from NHMRC, MRFF, and NIH and consulting fees from Eisai Australia. SRS has received grants from NHMRC, Alzheimer's Association (USA), Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation, and Bright Focus Foundation and had a paid role in MRFF Grant Assessment Committee. The other authors did not report any conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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32. Evolution of white matter hyperintensity segmentation methods and implementation over the past two decades; an incomplete shift towards deep learning.
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Rahmani M, Dierker D, Yaeger L, Saykin A, Luckett PH, Vlassenko AG, Owens C, Jafri H, Womack K, Fripp J, Xia Y, Tosun D, Benzinger TLS, Masters CL, Lee JM, Morris JC, Goyal MS, Strain JF, Kukull W, Weiner M, Burnham S, CoxDoecke TJ, Fedyashov V, Fripp J, Shishegar R, Xiong C, Marcus D, Raniga P, Li S, Aschenbrenner A, Hassenstab J, Lim YY, Maruff P, Sohrabi H, Robertson J, Markovic S, Bourgeat P, Doré V, Mayo CJ, Mussoumzadeh P, Rowe C, Villemagne V, Bateman R, Fowler C, Li QX, Martins R, Schindler S, Shaw L, Cruchaga C, Harari O, Laws S, Porter T, O'Brien E, Perrin R, Kukull W, Bateman R, McDade E, Jack C, Morris J, Yassi N, Bourgeat P, Perrin R, Roberts B, Villemagne V, Fedyashov V, and Goudey B
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- Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Neuroimaging methods, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain pathology, Dementia diagnostic imaging, Aging physiology, Aging pathology, Deep Learning, White Matter diagnostic imaging, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
This systematic review examines the prevalence, underlying mechanisms, cohort characteristics, evaluation criteria, and cohort types in white matter hyperintensity (WMH) pipeline and implementation literature spanning the last two decades. Following Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) guidelines, we categorized WMH segmentation tools based on their methodologies from January 1, 2000, to November 18, 2022. Inclusion criteria involved articles using openly available techniques with detailed descriptions, focusing on WMH as a primary outcome. Our analysis identified 1007 visual rating scales, 118 pipeline development articles, and 509 implementation articles. These studies predominantly explored aging, dementia, psychiatric disorders, and small vessel disease, with aging and dementia being the most prevalent cohorts. Deep learning emerged as the most frequently developed segmentation technique, indicative of a heightened scrutiny in new technique development over the past two decades. We illustrate observed patterns and discrepancies between published and implemented WMH techniques. Despite increasingly sophisticated quantitative segmentation options, visual rating scales persist, with the SPM technique being the most utilized among quantitative methods and potentially serving as a reference standard for newer techniques. Our findings highlight the need for future standards in WMH segmentation, and we provide recommendations based on these observations., Competing Interests: Declarations. Ethics approval: Not applicable. Consent to participate: Not applicable. Consent for publication: Not applicable. Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests. Conflicts of interest: The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper. This declaration is made to confirm that there has been no financial or personal relationship with other people or organizations that could inappropriately influence or bias the work presented in this manuscript. This includes, but is not limited to, employment, consultancies, stock ownership, honoraria, paid expert testimony, patent applications/registrations, and grants or other funding., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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33. CYP1B1-RMDN2 Alzheimer's disease endophenotype locus identified for cerebral tau PET.
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Nho K, Risacher SL, Apostolova LG, Bice PJ, Brosch JR, Deardorff R, Faber K, Farlow MR, Foroud T, Gao S, Rosewood T, Kim JP, Nudelman K, Yu M, Aisen P, Sperling R, Hooli B, Shcherbinin S, Svaldi D, Jack CR Jr, Jagust WJ, Landau S, Vasanthakumar A, Waring JF, Doré V, Laws SM, Masters CL, Porter T, Rowe CC, Villemagne VL, Dumitrescu L, Hohman TJ, Libby JB, Mormino E, Buckley RF, Johnson K, Yang HS, Petersen RC, Ramanan VK, Ertekin-Taner N, Vemuri P, Cohen AD, Fan KH, Kamboh MI, Lopez OL, Bennett DA, Ali M, Benzinger T, Cruchaga C, Hobbs D, De Jager PL, Fujita M, Jadhav V, Lamb BT, Tsai AP, Castanho I, Mill J, Weiner MW, and Saykin AJ
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Animals, Female, Humans, Male, Mice, Amyloid beta-Peptides metabolism, Apolipoprotein E4 genetics, Apolipoprotein E4 metabolism, Disease Models, Animal, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Alzheimer Disease genetics, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Alzheimer Disease metabolism, Cytochrome P-450 CYP1B1 genetics, Cytochrome P-450 CYP1B1 metabolism, Endophenotypes, Genome-Wide Association Study, Positron-Emission Tomography methods, tau Proteins metabolism, tau Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Determining the genetic architecture of Alzheimer's disease pathologies can enhance mechanistic understanding and inform precision medicine strategies. Here, we perform a genome-wide association study of cortical tau quantified by positron emission tomography in 3046 participants from 12 independent studies. The CYP1B1-RMDN2 locus is associated with tau deposition. The most significant signal is at rs2113389, explaining 4.3% of the variation in cortical tau, while APOE4 rs429358 accounts for 3.6%. rs2113389 is associated with higher tau and faster cognitive decline. Additive effects, but no interactions, are observed between rs2113389 and diagnosis, APOE4, and amyloid beta positivity. CYP1B1 expression is upregulated in AD. rs2113389 is associated with higher CYP1B1 expression and methylation levels. Mouse model studies provide additional functional evidence for a relationship between CYP1B1 and tau deposition but not amyloid beta. These results provide insight into the genetic basis of cerebral tau deposition and support novel pathways for therapeutic development in AD., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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34. Harmonizing tau positron emission tomography in Alzheimer's disease: The CenTauR scale and the joint propagation model.
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Leuzy A, Raket LL, Villemagne VL, Klein G, Tonietto M, Olafson E, Baker S, Saad ZS, Bullich S, Lopresti B, Bohorquez SS, Boada M, Betthauser TJ, Charil A, Collins EC, Collins JA, Cullen N, Gunn RN, Higuchi M, Hostetler E, Hutchison RM, Iaccarino L, Insel PS, Irizarry MC, Jack CR Jr, Jagust WJ, Johnson KA, Johnson SC, Karten Y, Marquié M, Mathotaarachchi S, Mintun MA, Ossenkoppele R, Pappas I, Petersen RC, Rabinovici GD, Rosa-Neto P, Schwarz CG, Smith R, Stephens AW, Whittington A, Carrillo MC, Pontecorvo MJ, Haeberlein SB, Dunn B, Kolb HC, Sivakumaran S, Rowe CC, Hansson O, and Doré V
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Cohort Studies, Radiopharmaceuticals, Models, Statistical, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Alzheimer Disease metabolism, Positron-Emission Tomography methods, tau Proteins metabolism, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain metabolism
- Abstract
Introduction: Tau-positron emission tomography (PET) outcome data of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) cannot currently be meaningfully compared or combined when different tracers are used due to differences in tracer properties, instrumentation, and methods of analysis., Methods: Using head-to-head data from five cohorts with tau PET radiotracers designed to target tau deposition in AD, we tested a joint propagation model (JPM) to harmonize quantification (units termed "CenTauR" [CTR]). JPM is a statistical model that simultaneously models the relationships between head-to-head and anchor point data. JPM was compared to a linear regression approach analogous to the one used in the amyloid PET Centiloid scale., Results: A strong linear relationship was observed between CTR values across brain regions. Using the JPM approach, CTR estimates were similar to, but more accurate than, those derived using the linear regression approach., Discussion: Preliminary findings using the JPM support the development and adoption of a universal scale for tau-PET quantification., Highlights: Tested a novel joint propagation model (JPM) to harmonize quantification of tau PET. Units of common scale are termed "CenTauRs". Tested a Centiloid-like linear regression approach. Using five cohorts with head-to-head tau PET, JPM outperformed linearregressionbased approach. Strong linear relationship was observed between CenTauRs values across brain regions., (© 2024 The Author(s). Alzheimer's & Dementia published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Alzheimer's Association.)
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- 2024
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35. Prediction of future cognitive decline among cognitively unimpaired individuals using measures of soluble phosphorylated tau or tau tangle pathology.
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Ossenkoppele R, Salvadó G, Janelidze S, Binette AP, Bali D, Karlsson L, Palmqvist S, Mattsson-Carlgren N, Stomrud E, Therriault J, Rahmouni N, Rosa-Neto P, Coomans EM, van de Giessen E, van der Flier WM, Teunissen CE, Jonaitis EM, Johnson SC, Villeneuve S, Benzinger TLS, Schindler SE, Bateman RJ, Doecke JD, Doré V, Feizpour A, Masters CL, Rowe C, Wiste HJ, Petersen RC, Jack CR Jr, and Hansson O
- Abstract
Plasma p-tau217 and Tau-PET are strong prognostic biomarkers in Alzheimer's disease (AD), but their relative performance in predicting future cognitive decline among cognitively unimpaired (CU) individuals is unclear. In this head-to-head comparison study including 9 cohorts and 1534 individuals, we found that plasma p-tau217 and medial temporal lobe Tau-PET signal showed similar associations with cognitive decline on a global cognitive composite test (R
2 PET =0.32 vs R2 PLASMA =0.32, pdifference =0.812) and with progression to mild cognitive impairment (Hazard ratio[HR]PET =1.56[1.43-1.70] vs HRPLASMA =1.63[1.50-1.77], pdifference =0.627). Combined plasma and PET models were superior to the single biomarker models (R2 =0.36, p<0.01). Furthermore, sequential selection using plasma p-tau217 and then Tau-PET reduced the number of participants required for a clinical trial by 94%, compared to a 75% reduction when using plasma p-tau217 alone. We conclude that plasma p-tau217 and Tau-PET showed similar performance for predicting future cognitive decline in CU individuals, and their sequential use (i.e., plasma p-tau217 followed by Tau-PET in a subset with high plasma p-tau217) is useful for screening in clinical trials in preclinical AD., Competing Interests: DECLARATION OF INTERESTS R.O. has received research support from Avid Radiopharmaceuticals, Janssen Research & Development, Roche, Quanterix and Optina Diagnostics. He has given lectures in symposia sponsored by GE Healthcare and serves on advisory boards for Asceneuron and Bristol Myers Squibb. SP has acquired research support (for the institution) from ki elements / ADDF and Avid. In the past 2 years, he has received consultancy/speaker fees from Bioartic, Biogen, Esai, Lilly, and Roche. Research programs of WF have been funded by ZonMW, NWO, EU-JPND, EU-IHI, Alzheimer Nederland, Hersenstichting CardioVascular Onderzoek Nederland, Health~Holland, Topsector Life Sciences & Health, stichting Dioraphte, Gieskes-Strijbis fonds, stichting Equilibrio, Edwin Bouw fonds, Pasman stichting, stichting Alzheimer & Neuropsychiatrie Foundation, Philips, Biogen MA Inc, Novartis-NL, Life-MI, AVID, Roche BV, Fujifilm, Eisai, Combinostics. WF holds the Pasman chair. WF is recipient of ABOARD, which is a public-private partnership receiving funding from ZonMW (#73305095007) and Health~Holland, Topsector Life Sciences & Health (PPP-allowance; #LSHM20106). WF is recipient of TAP-dementia (www.tap-dementia.nl), receiving funding from ZonMw (#10510032120003) in the context of Onderzoeksprogramma Dementie, part of the Dutch National Dementia Strategy. TAP-dementia receives co-financing from Avid Radiopharmaceuticals and Amprion. Gieskes-Strijbis fonds also contributes to TAP-dementia. WF has been an invited speaker at Biogen MA Inc, Danone, Eisai, WebMD Neurology (Medscape), NovoNordisk, Springer Healthcare, European Brain Council. WF is consultant to Oxford Health Policy Forum CIC, Roche, Biogen MA Inc, and Eisai. WF participated in advisory boards of Biogen MA Inc, Roche, and Eli Lilly. WF is member of the steering committee of EVOKE/EVOKE+ (NovoNordisk). All funding is paid to her institution. WF is member of the steering committee of PAVE, and Think Brain Health. WF was associate editor of Alzheimer, Research & Therapy in 2020/2021. WF is associate editor at Brain. EvdG has performed contract research for Heuron Inc. and Roche. EvdG has a consultancy agreement with IXICO and Life Molecular Imaging for reading PET scans. CET has research contracts with Acumen, ADx Neurosciences, AC-Immune, Alamar, Aribio, Axon Neurosciences, Beckman-Coulter, BioConnect, Bioorchestra, Brainstorm Therapeutics, Celgene, Cognition Therapeutics, EIP Pharma, Eisai, Eli Lilly, Fujirebio, Instant Nano Biosensors, Novo Nordisk, Olink, PeopleBio, Quanterix, Roche, Toyama, Vivoryon. She is editor in chief of Alzheimer Research and Therapy, and serves on editorial boards of Medidact Neurologie/Springer, and Neurology: Neuroimmunology & Neuroinflammation. She had consultancy/speaker contracts for Eli Lilly, Merck, Novo Nordisk, Olink and Roche. SES has served as a consultant to Eisai and Novo Nordisk and has received speaker fees from Eli Lilly and Medscape. She has analyzed biomarker data provided by C2N Diagnostics. JT has served as a consultant for the Neurotorium educational platform and for Alzheon. PR-N has served at scientific advisory boards and/or as a consultant for Roche, Novo Nordisk, Eisai, and Cerveau radiopharmaceuticals. CCR has received research grants from NHMRC, Enigma Australia, Biogen, Eisai and Abbvie. He is on the scientific advisory board for Enigma/Mellieur Technologies and has consulted for Prothena, Eisai, Roche, and Biogen Australia. RJB laboratory research funding from the National Institutes of Health, Alzheimer’s Association, BrightFocus Foundation, Rainwater Foundation, Association for Frontotemporal Degeneration FTD Biomarkers Initiative, Avid Radiopharmaceuticals, Janssen, Tau Consortium, Novartis, Centene Corporation, Association for Frontotemporal Degeneration, the Cure Alzheimer’s Fund, Coins for Alzheimer’s Research Trust Fund, The Foundation for Barnes-Jewish Hospital, Good Ventures Foundation, DIAN-TU Pharma Consortium, Tau SILK Consortium (AbbVie, Biogen, Eli Lilly, and an anonymous organization), the NfL Consortium (AbbVie, Biogen, Bristol Meyers Squibb, Hoffman La Roche), and the Tracy Family SILQ Center; having equity ownership interest in C2N Diagnostics and receiving income based on technology licensed by Washington University to C2N Diagnostics; and receiving income from C2N Diagnostics for serving on the scientific advisory board. OH has acquired research support (for the institution) from AVID Radiopharmaceuticals, Biogen, C2N Diagnostics, Eli Lilly, Eisai, Fujirebio, GE Healthcare, and Roche. In the past 2 years, he has received consultancy/speaker fees from AC Immune, Alzpath, BioArctic, Biogen, Bristol Meyer Squibb, Cerveau, Eisai, Eli Lilly, Fujirebio, Merck, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, Roche, Sanofi and Siemens. SCJ has served in the past two years on advisory boards for Enigma Biomedical and ALZPath. The other authors report no competing interests.- Published
- 2024
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36. Clinical Evidence for GLP-1 Receptor Agonists in Alzheimer's Disease: A Systematic Review.
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Liang Y, Doré V, Rowe CC, and Krishnadas N
- Abstract
Background: Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia. While preclinical studies have shown benefits of glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RA) in targeting core AD pathology, clinical studies are limited., Objective: A systematic review was performed to evaluate GLP-1 RAs in AD for their potential to target core AD pathology and improve cognition., Methods: Searches were conducted via three different databases (PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Library). Search terms included Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) terms: 'glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist' and 'Alzheimer's disease', as well as entry terms 'GLP-1 RA', 'AD', and three types of GLP-1 RA: 'liraglutide', 'exenatide', and 'lixisenatide'., Results: A total of 1,444 studies were screened. Six articles that met criteria were included (four randomized control trials [RCTs] and two protocol studies). Two RCTs with amyloid-β and tau biomarker endpoints did not observe an end of treatment difference between the placebo and treated groups. In three RCTs with cognitive endpoints, there was no end of treatment difference between placebo and treated groups. GLP-1 RA showed metabolic benefits, such as lower body mass index and improved glucose levels on oral glucose tolerance tests in treated groups. GLP-1 RA may mitigate the decline in cerebral glucose metabolism and show enhanced blood-brain glucose transport capacity using
18 F-FDG PET, however, more data is needed., Conclusions: GLP-1 RA therapy did not alter amyloid-β and tau biomarkers nor show improvements in cognition but showed potential metabolic and neuroprotective benefits., Competing Interests: Christopher C. Rowe has received research grants from NHMRC, Enigma Australia, Biogen, Eisai and Abbvie. He is on the scientific advisory board for Cerveau Technologies and has consulted for Prothena, Eisai, Roche, and Biogen Australia. All other authors have no conflict of interest to report., (© 2024 – The authors. Published by IOS Press.)- Published
- 2024
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37. Suboptimal self-reported sleep efficiency and duration are associated with faster accumulation of brain amyloid beta in cognitively unimpaired older adults.
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Pivac LN, Brown BM, Sewell KR, Doecke JD, Villemagne VL, Doré V, Weinborn M, Sohrabi HR, Gardener SL, Bucks RS, Laws SM, Taddei K, Maruff P, Masters CL, Rowe C, Martins RN, and Rainey-Smith SR
- Abstract
Introduction: This study investigated whether self-reported sleep quality is associated with brain amyloid beta (Aβ) accumulation., Methods: Linear mixed effect model analyses were conducted for 189 cognitively unimpaired (CU) older adults (mean ± standard deviation 74.0 ± 6.2; 53.2% female), with baseline self-reported sleep data, and positron emission tomography-determined brain Aβ measured over a minimum of three time points (range 33.3-72.7 months). Analyses included random slopes and intercepts, interaction for apolipoprotein E ( APOE ) ε4 allele status, and time, adjusting for sex and baseline age., Results: Sleep duration <6 hours, in APOE ε4 carriers, and sleep efficiency <65%, in the whole sample and APOE ε4 non-carriers, is associated with faster accumulation of brain Aβ., Discussion: These findings suggest a role for self-reported suboptimal sleep efficiency and duration in the accumulation of Alzheimer's disease (AD) neuropathology in CU individuals. Additionally, poor sleep efficiency represents a potential route via which individuals at lower genetic risk may progress to preclinical AD., Highlights: In cognitively unimpaired older adults self-report sleep is associated with brain amyloid beta (Aβ) accumulation.Across sleep characteristics, this relationship differs by apolipoprotein E ( APOE ) genotype.Sleep duration <6 hours is associated with faster brain Aβ accumulation in APOE ε4 carriers.Sleep efficiency < 65% is associated with faster brain Aβ accumulation in APOE ε4 non-carriers.Personalized sleep interventions should be studied for potential to slow Aβ accumulation., Competing Interests: L.N.P., B.M.B., K.R.S., J.D.D., V.D., M.W., H.R.S., S.L.G., R.S.B., S.M.L., K.T., and S.R.R.S. report no disclosures. V.L.V. is and has been a consultant or paid speaker at sponsored conference sessions for Eli Lilly, Life Molecular Imaging, ACE Barcelona, and IXICO. P.M. is a full‐time employee of Cogstate Ltd. C.L.M. is an advisor to Prana Biotechnology Ltd and a consultant to Eli Lilly. C.C.R. has served on scientific advisory boards for Bayer Pharma, Elan Corporation, GE Healthcare, and AstraZeneca; has received speaker honoraria from Bayer Pharma and GE Healthcare; and has received research support from Bayer Pharma, GE Healthcare, Piramal Lifesciences, and Avid Radiopharmaceuticals. R.N.M. is founder of, and owns stock in, Alzhyme, and is a co‐founder of the KaRa Institute of Neurological Diseases. Author disclosures are available in the supporting information, (© 2024 The Authors. Alzheimer's & Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment & Disease Monitoring published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Alzheimer's Association.)
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- 2024
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38. Tau in dementia with Lewy bodies.
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Chin KS, Churilov L, Doré V, Villemagne VL, Rowe CC, Yassi N, and Watson R
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Humans, Amyloid beta-Peptides metabolism, Biomarkers, Positron-Emission Tomography methods, tau Proteins metabolism, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Lewy Body Disease diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Objective: Neurofibrillary tangles are present in a proportion of people with dementia with Lewy bodies and may be associated with worse cognition. Recent advances in biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease include second-generation tau positron emission tomography as well as the detection of phosphorylated tau at threonine 181 (p-tau181) in plasma. This study aimed to investigate tau in people with dementia with Lewy bodies using a second-generation tau positron emission tomography tracer as well as plasma p-tau181., Methods: Twenty-seven participants (mean age 74.7 ± 5.5) with clinically diagnosed probable dementia with Lewy bodies underwent comprehensive clinical assessment and positron emission tomography imaging (
18 F-MK6240 and18 F-NAV4694). Plasma p-tau181 levels were measured using Simoa technology., Results: Five dementia with Lewy bodies participants (18.5%) had an abnormal tau positron emission tomography (increased tau uptake in the temporal meta-region-of-interest). Higher plasma p-tau181 concentrations correlated with higher tau deposition in the temporal region (ρ = 0.46, 95% confidence interval = [0.10, 0.72]) and classified abnormal tau positron emission tomography in dementia with Lewy bodies with an area under the curve of 0.95 (95% confidence interval = [0.86, 0.99]). Plasma p-tau181 also correlated positively with cortical amyloid-beta binding (ρ = 0.68, 95% confidence interval = [0.40, 0.84]) and classified abnormal amyloid-beta positron emission tomography in dementia with Lewy bodies with an area under the curve of 0.91 (95% confidence interval = [0.79, 0.99]). There was no association found between tau deposition and any of the clinical variables., Conclusions: Tau is a common co-pathology in dementia with Lewy bodies. Plasma p-tau181 correlated with abnormal tau and amyloid-beta positron emission tomography and may potentially be used as a marker to identify co-morbid Alzheimer's disease-related pathology in dementia with Lewy bodies. The clinical implications of tau in dementia with Lewy bodies need to be further evaluated in larger longitudinal studies., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsChristopher C Rowe has received research grants (to his institution) from Cerveau/Enigma Technologies who supplied the precursor chemicals to make NAV4694 and MK6240, and is on the global advisory boards of Cerveau Technologies (unpaid), Roche and Prothera. All other co-authors have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.- Published
- 2024
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39. Brain 11β-Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenase Type 1 Occupancy by Xanamem™ Assessed by PET in Alzheimer's Disease and Cognitively Normal Individuals.
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Villemagne VL, Doré V, Chong L, Kassiou M, Mulligan R, Feizpour A, Taylor J, Roesner M, Miller T, and Rowe CC
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- Animals, Humans, Positron-Emission Tomography, Brain metabolism, 11-beta-Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenase Type 1 metabolism, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Alzheimer Disease drug therapy, Thiophenes, Tropanes
- Abstract
Background: 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11β-HSD1) regulates intracellular cortisol and its inhibition by the small molecule inhibitor, Xanamem™, may provide a disease-modifying strategy for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Animal models suggest a range of 30-60% enzyme inhibition may suffice to provide neuroprotection., Objective: To determine the regional brain occupancy of 11β-HSD1 by Xanamem™ in cognitively normal participants (CN) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI)/mild AD patients to investigate potential dosing ranges for future efficacy studies., Methods: Seventeen MCI/AD and 23 CN were included. Regional brain time-activity curves (TAC), standardized uptake values (SUV40-60) and volume of distribution (VT) from Logan plot with image derived input function from 11C-TARACT positron emission tomography (PET) were used to assess the degree of 11β-HSD1 occupancy by increasing doses of Xanamem™ (5 mg, 10 mg, 20 mg or 30 mg daily for 7 days)., Results: All measures showed high 11β-HSD1 occupancy with Xanamem to similar degree in CN and MCI/AD. The dose-response relationship was relatively flat above 5 mg. Respective median (interquartile range [Q1-Q3]) 11β-HSD1 occupancy in the MCI/AD and CN groups after treatment with 10 mg Xanamem were 80% [79-81%] and 75% [71-76%] in the neocortex, 69% [64-70%] and 61% [52-63%] in the medial temporal lobe, 80% [79-80%] and 73% [68-73%] in the basal ganglia, and 71% [67-75%] and 66% [62-68%] in the cerebellum., Conclusions: TAC, SUV40-60, and VT measures indicate Xanamem achieves high target occupancy levels with near saturation at 10 mg daily. These data support exploration of doses of≤10 mg daily in future clinical studies.
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- 2024
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40. How Can We Use Mathematical Modeling of Amyloid-β in Alzheimer's Disease Research and Clinical Practices?
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Chu C, Low YLC, Ma L, Wang Y, Cox T, Doré V, Masters CL, Goudey B, Jin L, and Pan Y
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- Humans, Amyloid beta-Peptides metabolism, Models, Theoretical, Brain pathology, Computer Simulation, Plaque, Amyloid pathology, Alzheimer Disease pathology
- Abstract
The accumulation of amyloid-β (Aβ) plaques in the brain is considered a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Mathematical modeling, capable of predicting the motion and accumulation of Aβ, has obtained increasing interest as a potential alternative to aid the diagnosis of AD and predict disease prognosis. These mathematical models have provided insights into the pathogenesis and progression of AD that are difficult to obtain through experimental studies alone. Mathematical modeling can also simulate the effects of therapeutics on brain Aβ levels, thereby holding potential for drug efficacy simulation and the optimization of personalized treatment approaches. In this review, we provide an overview of the mathematical models that have been used to simulate brain levels of Aβ (oligomers, protofibrils, and/or plaques). We classify the models into five categories: the general ordinary differential equation models, the general partial differential equation models, the network models, the linear optimal ordinary differential equation models, and the modified partial differential equation models (i.e., Smoluchowski equation models). The assumptions, advantages and limitations of these models are discussed. Given the popularity of using the Smoluchowski equation models to simulate brain levels of Aβ, our review summarizes the history and major advancements in these models (e.g., their application to predict the onset of AD and their combined use with network models). This review is intended to bring mathematical modeling to the attention of more scientists and clinical researchers working on AD to promote cross-disciplinary research.
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- 2024
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41. Implementation and Assessment of Tau Thresholds in Non-Demented Individuals as Predictors of Cognitive Decline in Tau Imaging Studies.
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Gogola A, Cohen AD, Snitz B, Minhas D, Tudorascu D, Ikonomovic MD, Shaaban CE, Doré V, Matan C, Bourgeat P, Mason NS, Leuzy A, Aizenstein H, Mathis CA, Lopez OL, Lopresti BJ, and Villemagne VL
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Aged, Middle Aged, Carbolines, Disease Progression, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Alzheimer Disease metabolism, Longitudinal Studies, Neuropsychological Tests, Brain metabolism, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain pathology, Aged, 80 and over, Sensitivity and Specificity, tau Proteins metabolism, Cognitive Dysfunction metabolism, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnostic imaging, Positron-Emission Tomography
- Abstract
Background: Tau accumulation in Alzheimer's disease is associated with short term clinical progression and faster rates of cognitive decline in individuals with high amyloid-β deposition. Defining an optimal threshold of tau accumulation predictive of cognitive decline remains a challenge., Objective: We tested the ability of regional tau PET sensitivity and specificity thresholds to predict longitudinal cognitive decline. We also tested the predictive performance of thresholds in the proposed new NIA-AA biological staging for Alzheimer's disease where multiple levels of tau positivity are used to stage participants., Methods: 18F-flortaucipir scans from 301 non-demented participants were processed and sampled. Four cognitive measures were assessed longitudinally. Regional standardized uptake value ratios were split into infra- and suprathreshold groups at baseline using previously derived thresholds. Survival analysis, log rank testing, and Generalized Estimation Equations assessed the relationship between the application of regional sensitivity/specificity thresholds and change in cognitive measures as well as tau threshold performance in predicting cognitive decline within the new NIA-AA biological staging., Results: The meta temporal region was best for predicting risk of short-term cognitive decline in suprathreshold, as compared to infrathreshold participants. When applying multiple levels of tau positivity, each subsequent level of tau identified cognitive decline at earlier timepoints., Conclusions: When using 18F-flortaucipir, meta temporal suprathreshold classification was associated with increased risk of cognitive decline, suggesting that abnormal tau deposition in the cortex predicts decline. Likewise, the application of multiple levels of tau clearly predicts the distinctive cognitive trajectories in the new NIA-AA biological staging framework.
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- 2024
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42. Longitudinal trajectories of basal forebrain volume in normal aging and Alzheimer's disease.
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Xia Y, Maruff P, Doré V, Bourgeat P, Laws SM, Fowler C, Rainey-Smith SR, Martins RN, Villemagne VL, Rowe CC, Masters CL, Coulson EJ, and Fripp J
- Subjects
- Humans, Aged, Aging pathology, Amyloid beta-Peptides, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cholinergic Agents, Positron-Emission Tomography, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Alzheimer Disease pathology, Basal Forebrain diagnostic imaging, Basal Forebrain pathology, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnostic imaging, Cognitive Dysfunction pathology
- Abstract
Dysfunction of the cholinergic basal forebrain (BF) system and amyloid-β (Aβ) deposition are early pathological features in Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, their association in early AD is not well-established. This study investigated the nature and magnitude of volume loss in the BF, over an extended period, in 516 older adults who completed Aβ-PET and serial magnetic resonance imaging scans. Individuals were grouped at baseline according to the presence of cognitive impairment (CU, CI) and Aβ status (Aβ-, Aβ+). Longitudinal volumetric changes in the BF and hippocampus were assessed across groups. The results indicated that high Aβ levels correlated with faster volume loss in the BF and hippocampus, and the effect of Aβ varied within BF subregions. Compared to CU Aβ+ individuals, Aβ-related loss among CI Aβ+ adults was much greater in the predominantly cholinergic subregion of Ch4p, whereas no difference was observed for the Ch1/Ch2 region. The findings support early and substantial vulnerability of the BF and further reveal distinctive degeneration of BF subregions during early AD., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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43. Biostatistical Estimation of Tau Threshold Hallmarks (BETTH) Algorithm for Human Tau PET Imaging Studies.
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Gogola A, Lopresti BJ, Tudorascu D, Snitz B, Minhas D, Doré V, Ikonomovic MD, Shaaban CE, Matan C, Bourgeat P, Mason NS, Aizenstein H, Mathis CA, Klunk WE, Rowe CC, Lopez OL, Cohen AD, and Villemagne VL
- Subjects
- Humans, Amyloid beta-Peptides metabolism, Brain metabolism, Carbolines, Positron-Emission Tomography, tau Proteins metabolism, Middle Aged, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
A methodology for determining tau PET thresholds is needed to confidently detect early tau deposition. We compared multiple threshold-determining methods in participants who underwent either
18 F-flortaucipir or18 F-MK-6240 PET scans. Methods:18 F-flortaucipir ( n = 798) and18 F-MK-6240 ( n = 216) scans were processed and sampled to obtain regional SUV ratios. Subsamples of the cohorts were based on participant diagnosis, age, amyloid-β status (positive or negative), and neurodegeneration status (positive or negative), creating older-adult (age ≥ 55 y) cognitively unimpaired (amyloid-β-negative, neurodegeneration-negative) and cognitively impaired (mild cognitive impairment/Alzheimer disease, amyloid-β-positive, neurodegeneration-positive) groups, and then were further subsampled via matching to reduce significant differences in diagnostic prevalence, age, and Mini-Mental State Examination score. We used the biostatistical estimation of tau threshold hallmarks (BETTH) algorithm to determine sensitivity and specificity in 6 composite regions. Results: Parametric double receiver operating characteristic analysis yielded the greatest joint sensitivity in 5 of the 6 regions, whereas hierarchic clustering, gaussian mixture modeling, and k-means clustering all yielded perfect joint specificity (2.00) in all regions. Conclusion: When18 F-flortaucipir and18 F-MK-6240 are used, Alzheimer disease-related tau status is best assessed using 2 thresholds, a sensitivity one based on parametric double receiver operating characteristic analysis and a specificity one based on gaussian mixture modeling, delimiting an uncertainty zone indicating participants who may require further evaluation., (© 2023 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging.)- Published
- 2023
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44. Validation of quantitative assessment of florbetaben PET scans as an adjunct to the visual assessment across 15 software methods.
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Jovalekic A, Roé-Vellvé N, Koglin N, Quintana ML, Nelson A, Diemling M, Lilja J, Gómez-González JP, Doré V, Bourgeat P, Whittington A, Gunn R, Stephens AW, and Bullich S
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Brain metabolism, Aniline Compounds, Positron-Emission Tomography methods, Amyloid, Software, Amyloid beta-Peptides metabolism, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Alzheimer Disease pathology
- Abstract
Purpose: Amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) with [
18 F]florbetaben (FBB) is an established tool for detecting Aβ deposition in the brain in vivo based on visual assessment of PET scans. Quantitative measures are commonly used in the research context and allow continuous measurement of amyloid burden. The aim of this study was to demonstrate the robustness of FBB PET quantification., Methods: This is a retrospective analysis of FBB PET images from 589 subjects. PET scans were quantified with 15 analytical methods using nine software packages (MIMneuro, Hermes BRASS, Neurocloud, Neurology Toolkit, statistical parametric mapping (SPM8), PMOD Neuro, CapAIBL, non-negative matrix factorization (NMF), AmyloidIQ ) that used several metrics to estimate Aβ load (SUVR, centiloid, amyloid load, and amyloid index). Six analytical methods reported centiloid (MIMneuro, standard centiloid, Neurology Toolkit, SPM8 (PET only), CapAIBL, NMF). All results were quality controlled., Results: The mean sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were 96.1 ± 1.6%, 96.9 ± 1.0%, and 96.4 ± 1.1%, respectively, for all quantitative methods tested when compared to histopathology, where available. The mean percentage of agreement between binary quantitative assessment across all 15 methods and visual majority assessment was 92.4 ± 1.5%. Assessments of reliability, correlation analyses, and comparisons across software packages showed excellent performance and consistent results between analytical methods., Conclusion: This study demonstrated that quantitative methods using both CE marked software and other widely available processing tools provided comparable results to visual assessments of FBB PET scans. Software quantification methods, such as centiloid analysis, can complement visual assessment of FBB PET images and could be used in the future for identification of early amyloid deposition, monitoring disease progression and treatment effectiveness., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
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45. A universal neocortical mask for Centiloid quantification.
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Bourgeat P, Doré V, Rowe CC, Benzinger T, Tosun D, Goyal MS, LaMontagne P, Jin L, Weiner MW, Masters CL, Fripp J, and Villemagne VL
- Abstract
Introduction: The Centiloid (CL) project was developed to harmonize the quantification of amyloid beta (Aβ) positron emission tomography (PET) scans to a unified scale. The CL neocortical mask was defined using
11 C Pittsburgh compound B (PiB), overlooking potential differences in regional distribution among Aβ tracers. We created a universal mask using an independent dataset of five Aβ tracers, and investigated its impact on inter-tracer agreement, tracer variability, and group separation., Methods: Using data from the Alzheimer's Dementia Onset and Progression in International Cohorts (ADOPIC) study (Australian Imaging Biomarkers and Lifestyle + Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative + Open Access Series of Imaging Studies), age-matched pairs of mild Alzheimer's disease (AD) and healthy controls (HC) were selected:18 F-florbetapir ( N = 147 pairs),18 F-florbetaben ( N = 22),18 F-flutemetamol ( N = 10),18 F-NAV ( N = 42),11 C-PiB ( N = 63). The images were spatially and standardized uptake value ratio normalized. For each tracer, the mean AD-HC difference image was thresholded to maximize the overlap with the standard neocortical mask. The universal mask was defined as the intersection of all five masks. It was evaluated on the Global Alzheimer's Association Interactive Network (GAAIN) head-to-head datasets in terms of inter-tracer agreement and variance in the young controls (YC) and on the ADOPIC dataset comparing separation between HC/AD and HC/mild cognitive impairment (MCI)., Results: In the GAAIN dataset, the universal mask led to a small reduction in the variance of the YC, and a small increase in the inter-tracer agreement. In the ADOPIC dataset, it led to a better separation between HC/AD and HC/MCI at baseline., Discussion: The universal CL mask led to an increase in inter-tracer agreement and group separation. Those increases were, however, very small, and do not provide sufficient benefits to support departing from the existing standard CL mask, which is suitable for the quantification of all Aβ tracers., Highlights: This study built an amyloid universal mask using a matched cohort for the five most commonly used amyloid positron emission tomography tracers.There was a high overlap between each tracer-specific mask.Differences in quantification and group separation between the standard and universal mask were small.The existing standard Centiloid mask is suitable for the quantification of all amyloid beta tracers., Competing Interests: Chris Rowe has received research grants from Piramal Imaging, GE Healthcare, Cerveau, Astra Zeneca, and Biogen. Victor Villemagne is and has been a consultant or paid speaker at sponsored conference sessions for Eli Lilly, Piramal Imaging, Life Molecular Imaging, GE Healthcare, Abbvie, Lundbeck, Shanghai Green Valley Pharmaceutical Co Ltd, IXICO, and Hoffmann La Roche. The other authors have nothing to disclose., (© 2023 Commonwealth of Australia. Alzheimer's & Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment & Disease Monitoring published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Alzheimer's Association.)- Published
- 2023
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46. CenTauR: Toward a universal scale and masks for standardizing tau imaging studies.
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Villemagne VL, Leuzy A, Bohorquez SS, Bullich S, Shimada H, Rowe CC, Bourgeat P, Lopresti B, Huang K, Krishnadas N, Fripp J, Takado Y, Gogola A, Minhas D, Weimer R, Higuchi M, Stephens A, Hansson O, and Doré V
- Abstract
Introduction: Recently, an increasing number of tau tracers have become available. There is a need to standardize quantitative tau measures across tracers, supporting a universal scale. We developed several cortical tau masks and applied them to generate a tau imaging universal scale., Method: One thousand forty-five participants underwent tau scans with either
18 F-flortaucipir,18 F-MK6240,18 F-PI2620,18 F-PM-PBB3,18 F-GTP1, or18 F-RO948. The universal mask was generated from cognitively unimpaired amyloid beta (Aβ)- subjects and Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients with Aβ+. Four additional regional cortical masks were defined within the constraints of the universal mask. A universal scale, the CenTauRz , was constructed., Results: None of the regions known to display off-target signal were included in the masks. The CenTauRz allows robust discrimination between low and high levels of tau deposits., Discussion: We constructed several tau-specific cortical masks for the AD continuum and a universal standard scale designed to capture the location and degree of abnormality that can be applied across tracers and across centers. The masks are freely available at https://www.gaain.org/centaur-project., Competing Interests: Victor Villemagne has received research grants from NHMRC (GNT2001320), the Aging Mind Foundation (DAF2255207) and NIH (2P01AG025204‐16) and is and has been a consultant or paid speaker at sponsored conference sessions for Eli Lilly, Life Molecular Imaging, ACE Barcelona, and IXICO. Sandra Sanabria Bohorquez and Robby Weimer are a full‐time employees and stock owners of Roche. Santiago Bullich and Andrew Stephen are full‐time employees of Life Molecular Imaging GmbH. Hitoshi Shimada and Makoto Higuchi hold patents on compounds related to the present report (JP 5422782/EP 12 884 742.3/CA2894994/HK1208672). Christopher C. Rowe has received research grants from NHMRC, Enigma Australia, Biogen, Eisai, and Abbvie. He is on the scientific advisory board for Cerveau Technologies and consulted for Prothena, Eisai, Roche, and Biogen Australia. Oskar Hansson has acquired research support (for the institution) from ADx, AVID Radiopharmaceuticals, Biogen, Eli Lilly, Eisai, Fujirebio, GE Healthcare, Pfizer, and Roche. In the past 2 years, he has received consultancy/speaker fees from AC Immune, Amylyx, Alzpath, BioArctic, Biogen, Cerveau, Eisai, Eli Lilly, Fujirebio, Genentech, Merck, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, Roche, Sanofi, and Siemens. The other authors did not report any conflict of interest., (© 2023 CSIRO and The Authors. Alzheimer's & Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment & Disease Monitoring published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Alzheimer's Association.)- Published
- 2023
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47. Tau, β-Amyloid, and Glucose Metabolism Following Service-Related Traumatic Brain Injury in Vietnam War Veterans: The Australian Imaging Biomarkers and Lifestyle Study of Aging-Veterans Study (AIBL-VETS).
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Cummins TL, Doré V, Feizpour A, Krishnadas N, Bourgeat P, Elias A, Lamb F, Williams R, Hopwood M, Landau S, Villemagne VL, Weiner M, and Rowe CC
- Subjects
- Aged, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Aging, Australia epidemiology, Biomarkers, Case-Control Studies, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 metabolism, Glucose, Life Style, Positron-Emission Tomography, Vietnam, Alzheimer Disease metabolism, Amyloid beta-Peptides metabolism, Brain Injuries, Traumatic diagnostic imaging, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnostic imaging, Cognitive Dysfunction etiology, Cognitive Dysfunction metabolism, tau Proteins metabolism, Veterans
- Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is common among military veterans and has been associated with an increased risk of dementia. It is unclear if this is due to increased risk for Alzheimer's disease (AD) or other mechanisms. This case control study sought evidence for AD, as defined by the 2018 National Institute on Aging - Alzheimer's Association (NIA-AA) research framework, by measuring tau, β-amyloid, and glucose metabolism using positron emission tomography (PET) in veterans with service-related TBI. Seventy male Vietnam war veterans-40 with TBI (age 68.0 ± 2.5 years) and 30 controls (age 70.1 ± 5.3 years)-with no prior diagnosis of dementia or mild cognitive impairment underwent β-amyloid (
18 F-Florbetaben), tau (18 F-Flortaucipir), and fluorodeoxyglucose (18 F-FDG) PET. The TBI cohort included 15 participants with mild, 16 with moderate, and nine with severe injury. β-Amyloid level was calculated using the Centiloid (CL) method and tau was measured by standardized uptake value ratios (SUVRs) using the cerebellar cortex as reference region. Analyses were adjusted for age and APOE-e4. The findings were validated in an independent cohort from the Department of Defense-Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (DOD ADNI) study. There were no significant nor trending differences in β-amyloid or tau levels or18 F-FDG uptake between the TBI and control groups before and after controlling for covariates. The β-amyloid and tau findings were replicated in the DOD ADNI validation cohort and persisted when the Australian Imaging Biomarkers and Lifestyle study of aging-Veterans study (AIBL-VETS) and DOD ADNI cohorts were combined (114 TBI vs. 87 controls in total). In conclusion, no increase in the later life accumulation of the neuropathological markers of AD in veterans with a remote history of TBI was identified.- Published
- 2023
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48. Leukocyte surface biomarkers implicate deficits of innate immunity in sporadic Alzheimer's disease.
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Huang X, Li Y, Fowler C, Doecke JD, Lim YY, Drysdale C, Zhang V, Park K, Trounson B, Pertile K, Rumble R, Pickering JW, Rissman RA, Sarsoza F, Abdel-Latif S, Lin Y, Doré V, Villemagne V, Rowe CC, Fripp J, Martins R, Wiley JS, Maruff P, Mintzer JE, Masters CL, and Gu BJ
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- Humans, Amyloid beta-Peptides metabolism, Biomarkers, Leukocytes metabolism, Immunity, Innate, Alzheimer Disease diagnosis
- Abstract
Introduction: Blood-based diagnostics and prognostics in sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD) are important for identifying at-risk individuals for therapeutic interventions., Methods: In three stages, a total of 34 leukocyte antigens were examined by flow cytometry immunophenotyping. Data were analyzed by logistic regression and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analyses., Results: We identified leukocyte markers differentially expressed in the patients with AD. Pathway analysis revealed a complex network involving upregulation of complement inhibition and downregulation of cargo receptor activity and Aβ clearance. A proposed panel including four leukocyte markers - CD11c, CD59, CD91, and CD163 - predicts patients' PET Aβ status with an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.93 (0.88 to 0.97). CD163 was the top performer in preclinical models. These findings have been validated in two independent cohorts., Conclusion: Our finding of changes on peripheral leukocyte surface antigens in AD implicates the deficit in innate immunity. Leukocyte-based biomarkers prove to be both sensitive and practical for AD screening and diagnosis., (© 2022 The Authors. Alzheimer's & Dementia published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Alzheimer's Association.)
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- 2023
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49. Rectal prolapse secondary to a urachal abscess in an alpaca cria.
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Guardado FJ, Santos MS, Doré V, Babkine M, and Nichols S
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- Animals, Abscess surgery, Abscess veterinary, Abscess diagnosis, Dysuria veterinary, Camelids, New World, Rectal Prolapse diagnosis, Rectal Prolapse surgery, Rectal Prolapse veterinary, Urachus, Urinary Tract Infections veterinary
- Abstract
A five-month-old alpaca cria presented with a history of abdominal pain, dysuria, and a recurring rectal prolapse. An ultrasonographic examination indicated a urachal abscess attached to the urinary bladder. The abscess was removed surgically, and the patient had an adequate recovery after the procedure and ancillary treatment. This case report highlights secondary complications that could arise following an infection of the urachus in new-world camelids. Key clinical message: Urachal abscess should be considered as a differential diagnosis in juvenile new-world camelids with rectal prolapse, tenesmus, or dysuria., (Copyright and/or publishing rights held by the Canadian Veterinary Medical Association.)
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- 2023
50. Plasma Aβ42/40 ratio, p-tau181, GFAP, and NfL across the Alzheimer's disease continuum: A cross-sectional and longitudinal study in the AIBL cohort.
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Chatterjee P, Pedrini S, Doecke JD, Thota R, Villemagne VL, Doré V, Singh AK, Wang P, Rainey-Smith S, Fowler C, Taddei K, Sohrabi HR, Molloy MP, Ames D, Maruff P, Rowe CC, Masters CL, and Martins RN
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- Humans, Amyloid beta-Peptides, Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein, Cross-Sectional Studies, Intermediate Filaments, Longitudinal Studies, Prospective Studies, Australia, Apolipoprotein E4, Biomarkers, tau Proteins, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Introduction: Plasma amyloid beta (Aβ)1-42/Aβ1-40 ratio, phosphorylated-tau181 (p-tau181), glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), and neurofilament light (NfL) are putative blood biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, head-to-head cross-sectional and longitudinal comparisons of the aforementioned biomarkers across the AD continuum are lacking., Methods: Plasma Aβ1-42, Aβ1-40, p-tau181, GFAP, and NfL were measured utilizing the Single Molecule Array (Simoa) platform and compared cross-sectionally across the AD continuum, wherein Aβ-PET (positron emission tomography)-negative cognitively unimpaired (CU Aβ-, n = 81) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI Aβ-, n = 26) participants were compared with Aβ-PET-positive participants across the AD continuum (CU Aβ+, n = 39; MCI Aβ+, n = 33; AD Aβ+, n = 46) from the Australian Imaging, Biomarker & Lifestyle Flagship Study of Ageing (AIBL) cohort. Longitudinal plasma biomarker changes were also assessed in MCI (n = 27) and AD (n = 29) participants compared with CU (n = 120) participants. In addition, associations between baseline plasma biomarker levels and prospective cognitive decline and Aβ-PET load were assessed over a 7 to 10-year duration., Results: Lower plasma Aβ1-42/Aβ1-40 ratio and elevated p-tau181 and GFAP were observed in CU Aβ+, MCI Aβ+, and AD Aβ+, whereas elevated plasma NfL was observed in MCI Aβ+ and AD Aβ+, compared with CU Aβ- and MCI Aβ-. Among the aforementioned plasma biomarkers, for models with and without AD risk factors (age, sex, and apolipoprotein E (APOE) ε4 carrier status), p-tau181 performed equivalent to or better than other biomarkers in predicting a brain Aβ-/+ status across the AD continuum. However, for models with and without the AD risk factors, a biomarker panel of Aβ1-42/Aβ1-40, p-tau181, and GFAP performed equivalent to or better than any of the biomarkers alone in predicting brain Aβ-/+ status across the AD continuum. Longitudinally, plasma Aβ1-42/Aβ1-40, p-tau181, and GFAP were altered in MCI compared with CU, and plasma GFAP and NfL were altered in AD compared with CU. In addition, lower plasma Aβ1-42/Aβ1-40 and higher p-tau181, GFAP, and NfL were associated with prospective cognitive decline and lower plasma Aβ1-42/Aβ1-40, and higher p-tau181 and GFAP were associated with increased Aβ-PET load prospectively., Discussion: These findings suggest that plasma biomarkers are altered cross-sectionally and longitudinally, along the AD continuum, and are prospectively associated with cognitive decline and brain Aβ-PET load. In addition, although p-tau181 performed equivalent to or better than other biomarkers in predicting an Aβ-/+ status across the AD continuum, a panel of biomarkers may have superior Aβ-/+ status predictive capability across the AD continuum., Highlights: Area under the curve (AUC) of p-tau181 ≥ AUC of Aβ42/40, GFAP, NfL in predicting PET Aβ-/+ status (Aβ-/+). AUC of Aβ42/40+p-tau181+GFAP panel ≥ AUC of Aβ42/40/p-tau181/GFAP/NfL for Aβ-/+. Longitudinally, Aβ42/40, p-tau181, and GFAP were altered in MCI versus CU. Longitudinally, GFAP and NfL were altered in AD versus CU. Aβ42/40, p-tau181, GFAP, and NfL are associated with prospective cognitive decline. Aβ42/40, p-tau181, and GFAP are associated with increased PET Aβ load prospectively., (© 2022 The Authors. Alzheimer's & Dementia published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Alzheimer's Association.)
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- 2023
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