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Extrastriatal binding of [¹²³I]FP-CIT in the thalamus and pons: gender and age dependencies assessed in a European multicentre database of healthy controls

Authors :
Koch, Walter
Unterrainer, Marcus
Xiong, Guoming
Bartenstein, Peter
Diemling, Markus
Varrone, Andrea
Dickson, John C.
Tossici-Bolt, Livia
Sera, Terez
Asenbaum, Susanne
Booij, Jan
Kapucu, Ozlem L.
Kluge, Andreas
Ziebell, Morten
Darcourt, Jacques
Nobili, Flavio
Pagani, Marco
Hesse, Swen
Vander Borght, Thierry
van Laere, Koen
Tatsch, Klaus
la Fougère, Christian
ANS - Amsterdam Neuroscience
Nuclear Medicine
Source :
European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging, 41(10), 1938-1946. Springer Verlag
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Apart from binding to the dopamine transporter (DAT), [(123)I]FP-CIT shows moderate affinity for the serotonin transporter (SERT), allowing imaging of both monoamine transporters in a single imaging session in different brain areas. The aim of this study was to systematically evaluate extrastriatal binding (predominantly due to SERT) and its age and gender dependencies in a large cohort of healthy controls. SPECT data from 103 healthy controls with well-defined criteria of normality acquired at 13 different imaging centres were analysed for extrastriatal binding using volumes of interest analysis for the thalamus and the pons. Data were examined for gender and age effects as well as for potential influence of striatal DAT radiotracer binding. Thalamic binding was significantly higher than pons binding. Partial correlations showed an influence of putaminal DAT binding on measured binding in the thalamus but not on the pons. Data showed high interindividual variation in extrastriatal binding. Significant gender effects with 31 % higher binding in women than in men were observed in the thalamus, but not in the pons. An age dependency with a decline per decade (±standard error) of 8.2 ± 1.3 % for the thalamus and 6.8 ± 2.9 % for the pons was shown. The potential to evaluate extrastriatal predominant SERT binding in addition to the striatal DAT in a single imaging session was shown using a large database of [(123)I]FP-CIT scans in healthy controls. For both the thalamus and the pons, an age-related decline in radiotracer binding was observed. Gender effects were demonstrated for binding in the thalamus only. As a potential clinical application, the data could be used as a reference to estimate SERT occupancy in addition to nigrostriatal integrity when using [(123)I]FP-CIT for DAT imaging in patients treated with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16197070
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging, 41(10), 1938-1946. Springer Verlag
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....0d8fdf49c2467d1f2290bed8b8c4353f