The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Parkinson's disease is overdiagnosed clinically at baseline in diagnostically uncertain cases: a 3-year European multicenter study with repeat [123I]FP-CIT SPECT

Parkinson's disease is overdiagnosed clinically at baseline in diagnostically uncertain cases: a 3-year European multicenter study with repeat [123I]FP-CIT SPECT
Parkinson's disease is overdiagnosed clinically at baseline in diagnostically uncertain cases: a 3-year European multicenter study with repeat [123I]FP-CIT SPECT
Overdiagnosis of Parkinson's disease (PD) is suggested by specialist review of community diagnosis, and in postmortem studies. In specialist centers 4 to 15% of patients entered into clinical trials as early PD do not have functional imaging support for a PD diagnosis. In a European multicenter, prospective, longitudinal study, we compared clinical diagnosis with functional SPECT imaging using [123I]FP-CIT (DaTSCAN, GE Healthcare). Repeat observations were performed over 3 years in patients with tremor and/or parkinsonism in whom there was initial diagnostic uncertainty between degenerative parkinsonism and nondegenerative tremor disorders. Video-recording of clinical features was scored independently of functional imaging results by two blinded clinicians at 36 months (= gold standard clinical diagnosis). Three readers, unaware of the clinical diagnosis, classified the images as normal or abnormal by visual inspection. The main endpoint was the sensitivity and specificity of SPECT imaging at baseline compared with the gold standard. In 99 patients completing the three serial assessments, on-site clinical diagnosis overdiagnosed degenerative parkinsonism at baseline in diagnostically uncertain cases compared with the gold standard clinical diagnosis (at 36 months), the latter giving a sensitivity of 93% and specificity of 46%. The corresponding baseline [123I]FP-CIT SPECT results showed a mean sensitivity of 78% and a specificity of 97%. Inter-reader agreement for rating scans as normal or abnormal was high (Cohen's kappa = 0.94-0.97).
parkinson's disease, [123I]FP-CIT, spect, swedd
0885-3185
500-508
Marshall, Vicky L.
87fada25-be6d-49ac-b5de-4ec282bbd64d
Reininger, Cornelia B.
77b0cd6a-6d8b-4689-8030-a2189fd773fc
Marquardt, Moritz
db3efb09-d705-4729-b98a-b429cd3fca84
Patterson, Jim
c1d97fc7-1e62-4418-a00f-f9c4d035da9b
Hadley, Donald M.
5d2f1857-b4bc-4367-ad39-7e9ffb022c87
Oertel, Wolfgang H.
86971de8-3d6b-498d-b6e4-eb29e1682899
Benamer, Hani T.S.
1a6d805b-5793-43a4-b9db-a7868feaa435
Kemp, Paul
f37a82f8-7613-439d-82dd-842d66ecfe58
Burn, David
6aa46484-5385-44f0-ac69-39ff993e8e67
Tolosa, Eduardo
d3c0129e-0f94-4bd9-881e-2488f9b4247e
Kulisevsky, Jamie
e8bca270-3d0b-4c67-8a80-2a4d56082023
Cunha, Luis
a11d4f30-46f5-4739-93b1-8f15f1918bb3
Costa, Durval
a4a563a3-182c-45b9-b304-550510b61465
Booij, Jan
9e068faf-7ba9-4155-a493-8d4ecdf1ee02
Tatsch, Klaus
4cc3138a-2479-4f16-8a05-34a6e4d09685
Chaudhuri, K. Ray
b0b0f636-3c3d-4bed-9f1c-8b6dfa62f662
Ulm, Gudrun
f418399b-ae18-42f9-b25b-08a238b4c7b8
Pogarell, Oliver
eea9376b-ade8-4bec-a18b-9829cf21ebfb
Höffken, Helmut
48a17cb3-b0c2-49b3-80fb-8db656876eff
Gerstner, Anja
d1922914-16db-4d09-a05c-c94b13f54879
Grosset, Donald G.
52fb88d4-a21d-478f-a779-9dbe54566bb2
Marshall, Vicky L.
87fada25-be6d-49ac-b5de-4ec282bbd64d
Reininger, Cornelia B.
77b0cd6a-6d8b-4689-8030-a2189fd773fc
Marquardt, Moritz
db3efb09-d705-4729-b98a-b429cd3fca84
Patterson, Jim
c1d97fc7-1e62-4418-a00f-f9c4d035da9b
Hadley, Donald M.
5d2f1857-b4bc-4367-ad39-7e9ffb022c87
Oertel, Wolfgang H.
86971de8-3d6b-498d-b6e4-eb29e1682899
Benamer, Hani T.S.
1a6d805b-5793-43a4-b9db-a7868feaa435
Kemp, Paul
f37a82f8-7613-439d-82dd-842d66ecfe58
Burn, David
6aa46484-5385-44f0-ac69-39ff993e8e67
Tolosa, Eduardo
d3c0129e-0f94-4bd9-881e-2488f9b4247e
Kulisevsky, Jamie
e8bca270-3d0b-4c67-8a80-2a4d56082023
Cunha, Luis
a11d4f30-46f5-4739-93b1-8f15f1918bb3
Costa, Durval
a4a563a3-182c-45b9-b304-550510b61465
Booij, Jan
9e068faf-7ba9-4155-a493-8d4ecdf1ee02
Tatsch, Klaus
4cc3138a-2479-4f16-8a05-34a6e4d09685
Chaudhuri, K. Ray
b0b0f636-3c3d-4bed-9f1c-8b6dfa62f662
Ulm, Gudrun
f418399b-ae18-42f9-b25b-08a238b4c7b8
Pogarell, Oliver
eea9376b-ade8-4bec-a18b-9829cf21ebfb
Höffken, Helmut
48a17cb3-b0c2-49b3-80fb-8db656876eff
Gerstner, Anja
d1922914-16db-4d09-a05c-c94b13f54879
Grosset, Donald G.
52fb88d4-a21d-478f-a779-9dbe54566bb2

Marshall, Vicky L., Reininger, Cornelia B., Marquardt, Moritz, Patterson, Jim, Hadley, Donald M., Oertel, Wolfgang H., Benamer, Hani T.S., Kemp, Paul, Burn, David, Tolosa, Eduardo, Kulisevsky, Jamie, Cunha, Luis, Costa, Durval, Booij, Jan, Tatsch, Klaus, Chaudhuri, K. Ray, Ulm, Gudrun, Pogarell, Oliver, Höffken, Helmut, Gerstner, Anja and Grosset, Donald G. (2009) Parkinson's disease is overdiagnosed clinically at baseline in diagnostically uncertain cases: a 3-year European multicenter study with repeat [123I]FP-CIT SPECT. Movement Disorders, 24 (4), 500-508. (doi:10.1002/mds.22108).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Overdiagnosis of Parkinson's disease (PD) is suggested by specialist review of community diagnosis, and in postmortem studies. In specialist centers 4 to 15% of patients entered into clinical trials as early PD do not have functional imaging support for a PD diagnosis. In a European multicenter, prospective, longitudinal study, we compared clinical diagnosis with functional SPECT imaging using [123I]FP-CIT (DaTSCAN, GE Healthcare). Repeat observations were performed over 3 years in patients with tremor and/or parkinsonism in whom there was initial diagnostic uncertainty between degenerative parkinsonism and nondegenerative tremor disorders. Video-recording of clinical features was scored independently of functional imaging results by two blinded clinicians at 36 months (= gold standard clinical diagnosis). Three readers, unaware of the clinical diagnosis, classified the images as normal or abnormal by visual inspection. The main endpoint was the sensitivity and specificity of SPECT imaging at baseline compared with the gold standard. In 99 patients completing the three serial assessments, on-site clinical diagnosis overdiagnosed degenerative parkinsonism at baseline in diagnostically uncertain cases compared with the gold standard clinical diagnosis (at 36 months), the latter giving a sensitivity of 93% and specificity of 46%. The corresponding baseline [123I]FP-CIT SPECT results showed a mean sensitivity of 78% and a specificity of 97%. Inter-reader agreement for rating scans as normal or abnormal was high (Cohen's kappa = 0.94-0.97).

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Published date: 15 March 2009
Keywords: parkinson's disease, [123I]FP-CIT, spect, swedd

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 149091
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/149091
ISSN: 0885-3185
PURE UUID: ded47d69-51c8-4496-8c56-aa8a493f5e31

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 29 Apr 2010 16:03
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 01:05

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Vicky L. Marshall
Author: Cornelia B. Reininger
Author: Moritz Marquardt
Author: Jim Patterson
Author: Donald M. Hadley
Author: Wolfgang H. Oertel
Author: Hani T.S. Benamer
Author: Paul Kemp
Author: David Burn
Author: Eduardo Tolosa
Author: Jamie Kulisevsky
Author: Luis Cunha
Author: Durval Costa
Author: Jan Booij
Author: Klaus Tatsch
Author: K. Ray Chaudhuri
Author: Gudrun Ulm
Author: Oliver Pogarell
Author: Helmut Höffken
Author: Anja Gerstner
Author: Donald G. Grosset

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×