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Sensitivity and specificity of dopamine transporter imaging with I-123-FP-CIT SPECT in dementia with Lewy bodies: a phase III, multicentre study

Sensitivity and specificity of dopamine transporter imaging with I-123-FP-CIT SPECT in dementia with Lewy bodies: a phase III, multicentre study
Sensitivity and specificity of dopamine transporter imaging with I-123-FP-CIT SPECT in dementia with Lewy bodies: a phase III, multicentre study
Background: Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) needs to be distinguished from other types of dementia because of important differences in patient management and outcome. Current clinically based diagnostic criteria for DLB have limited accuracy. Severe nigrostriatal dopaminergic degeneration occurs in DLB, but not in Alzheimer's disease or most other dementia subtypes, offering a potential system for a biological diagnostic marker. The primary aim of this study was to investigate the sensitivity and specificity, in the ante-mortem differentiation of probable DLB from other causes of dementia, of single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) brain imaging with the ligand I-123-2 beta-carbometoxy-3 beta-(4-iodophenyl)-N-(3-fluoropropyl) nortropane (I-123-FP-CIT), which binds to the dopamine transporter (DAT) reuptake site. Diagnostic accuracy, positive and negative predictive values, and inter-reader agreement were the secondary endpoints and a subgroup of possible DLB patients was also included.
Methods: We did a phase III study in which we used a I-123-FP-CIT SPECT scan to assess 326 patients with clinical diagnoses of probable (n=94) or possible (n=57) DLB or non-DLB dementia (n=147) established by a consensus panel (in 28 patients no diagnosis could be made). Three readers, unaware of the clinical diagnosis, classified the images as normal or abnormal by visual inspection. The study had 90% power to detect the differences between our anticipated sensitivity (0.80) and specificity (0.85) targets and prespecified lower thresholds (sensitivity 0.65, specificity 0.73) using one-sided binomial tests with a significance level of alpha=0.025.
Findings: Abnormal scans had a mean sensitivity of 77.7% for detecting clinical probable DLB, with specificity of 90.4% for excluding non-DLB dementia, which was predominantly due to Alzheimer's disease. A mean value of 85.7% was achieved for overall diagnostic accuracy, 82.4% for positive predictive value, and 87.5% for negative predictive value. Inter-reader agreement for rating scans as normal or abnormal was high (Cohen's kappa=0.87). The procedure was well tolerated with few adverse events.
Interpretation: A revision of the International Consensus Criteria for DLB has recommended that low DAT uptake in the basal ganglia, as shown by SPECT or PET imaging, be a suggestive feature for diagnosis. Our findings confirm the high correlation between abnormal (low binding) DAT activity measured with I-123-FP-CIT SPECT and a clinical diagnosis of probable DLB. The diagnostic accuracy is sufficiently high for this technique to be clinically useful in distinguishing DLB from Alzheimer's disease
disease, parkinsons-disease, system, body type, dlb, lewy bodies, lobe atrophy, management, senile dementia, memory, differential-diagnosis, task-force, sensitivity, clinical-diagnosis, dementia with lewy bodies, spect, dementia, alzheimers-disease, vascular dementia, adverse events, brain, alzheimer's disease, international workshop, pet
1474-4422
305-313
McKeith, Ian
f9916929-ec7a-4c00-b004-9758d10619e9
O'Brien, John
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Walker, Zuzana
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Tatsch, Klaus
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Booij, Jan
9e068faf-7ba9-4155-a493-8d4ecdf1ee02
Darcourt, Jacques
2fb2f95e-3525-4338-82f6-9ad3c4aebb02
Padovani, Alessandro
00eb3a12-2977-49f4-8fe4-b6ebd54ee654
Giubbini, Raffaele
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Bonuccelli, Ubaldo
c7ed6532-6f3b-4797-989c-cc16f1872efe
Volterrani, Duccio
273dbeae-c69c-41bd-82a9-091dde296fe3
Holmes, Clive
ada5abf3-8459-4cf7-be40-3f4e9391cc96
Kemp, Paul
f37a82f8-7613-439d-82dd-842d66ecfe58
Tabet, Naji
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Meyer, Ines
4e33d8f8-d9a9-4bd0-89bd-be10f30148df
Reininger, Cornelia
b9ab82af-9600-4078-bc1c-059f8bf76587
McKeith, Ian
f9916929-ec7a-4c00-b004-9758d10619e9
O'Brien, John
0906821d-4431-47e6-8155-27de5d7f9612
Walker, Zuzana
4b450f01-7f2a-44a8-9161-f036637e1d5a
Tatsch, Klaus
4cc3138a-2479-4f16-8a05-34a6e4d09685
Booij, Jan
9e068faf-7ba9-4155-a493-8d4ecdf1ee02
Darcourt, Jacques
2fb2f95e-3525-4338-82f6-9ad3c4aebb02
Padovani, Alessandro
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Giubbini, Raffaele
3206e55f-ebbc-4faf-906a-05790e887b05
Bonuccelli, Ubaldo
c7ed6532-6f3b-4797-989c-cc16f1872efe
Volterrani, Duccio
273dbeae-c69c-41bd-82a9-091dde296fe3
Holmes, Clive
ada5abf3-8459-4cf7-be40-3f4e9391cc96
Kemp, Paul
f37a82f8-7613-439d-82dd-842d66ecfe58
Tabet, Naji
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Meyer, Ines
4e33d8f8-d9a9-4bd0-89bd-be10f30148df
Reininger, Cornelia
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McKeith, Ian, O'Brien, John, Walker, Zuzana, Tatsch, Klaus, Booij, Jan, Darcourt, Jacques, Padovani, Alessandro, Giubbini, Raffaele, Bonuccelli, Ubaldo, Volterrani, Duccio, Holmes, Clive, Kemp, Paul, Tabet, Naji, Meyer, Ines and Reininger, Cornelia (2007) Sensitivity and specificity of dopamine transporter imaging with I-123-FP-CIT SPECT in dementia with Lewy bodies: a phase III, multicentre study. The Lancet Neurology, 6 (4), 305-313. (doi:10.1016/S1474-4422(07)70057-1).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) needs to be distinguished from other types of dementia because of important differences in patient management and outcome. Current clinically based diagnostic criteria for DLB have limited accuracy. Severe nigrostriatal dopaminergic degeneration occurs in DLB, but not in Alzheimer's disease or most other dementia subtypes, offering a potential system for a biological diagnostic marker. The primary aim of this study was to investigate the sensitivity and specificity, in the ante-mortem differentiation of probable DLB from other causes of dementia, of single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) brain imaging with the ligand I-123-2 beta-carbometoxy-3 beta-(4-iodophenyl)-N-(3-fluoropropyl) nortropane (I-123-FP-CIT), which binds to the dopamine transporter (DAT) reuptake site. Diagnostic accuracy, positive and negative predictive values, and inter-reader agreement were the secondary endpoints and a subgroup of possible DLB patients was also included.
Methods: We did a phase III study in which we used a I-123-FP-CIT SPECT scan to assess 326 patients with clinical diagnoses of probable (n=94) or possible (n=57) DLB or non-DLB dementia (n=147) established by a consensus panel (in 28 patients no diagnosis could be made). Three readers, unaware of the clinical diagnosis, classified the images as normal or abnormal by visual inspection. The study had 90% power to detect the differences between our anticipated sensitivity (0.80) and specificity (0.85) targets and prespecified lower thresholds (sensitivity 0.65, specificity 0.73) using one-sided binomial tests with a significance level of alpha=0.025.
Findings: Abnormal scans had a mean sensitivity of 77.7% for detecting clinical probable DLB, with specificity of 90.4% for excluding non-DLB dementia, which was predominantly due to Alzheimer's disease. A mean value of 85.7% was achieved for overall diagnostic accuracy, 82.4% for positive predictive value, and 87.5% for negative predictive value. Inter-reader agreement for rating scans as normal or abnormal was high (Cohen's kappa=0.87). The procedure was well tolerated with few adverse events.
Interpretation: A revision of the International Consensus Criteria for DLB has recommended that low DAT uptake in the basal ganglia, as shown by SPECT or PET imaging, be a suggestive feature for diagnosis. Our findings confirm the high correlation between abnormal (low binding) DAT activity measured with I-123-FP-CIT SPECT and a clinical diagnosis of probable DLB. The diagnostic accuracy is sufficiently high for this technique to be clinically useful in distinguishing DLB from Alzheimer's disease

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More information

Published date: 2007
Keywords: disease, parkinsons-disease, system, body type, dlb, lewy bodies, lobe atrophy, management, senile dementia, memory, differential-diagnosis, task-force, sensitivity, clinical-diagnosis, dementia with lewy bodies, spect, dementia, alzheimers-disease, vascular dementia, adverse events, brain, alzheimer's disease, international workshop, pet

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 62497
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/62497
ISSN: 1474-4422
PURE UUID: aed37530-1cac-4ba5-9c84-73c081e99d78
ORCID for Clive Holmes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1999-6912

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Date deposited: 05 Sep 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:07

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Contributors

Author: Ian McKeith
Author: John O'Brien
Author: Zuzana Walker
Author: Klaus Tatsch
Author: Jan Booij
Author: Jacques Darcourt
Author: Alessandro Padovani
Author: Raffaele Giubbini
Author: Ubaldo Bonuccelli
Author: Duccio Volterrani
Author: Clive Holmes ORCID iD
Author: Paul Kemp
Author: Naji Tabet
Author: Ines Meyer
Author: Cornelia Reininger

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