Anti-amyloid therapy and cerebral blood flow changes on Magnetic Resonance Imaging: a potential longitudinal biomarker of treatment response?

Andres Ricaurte-Fajardo, Jana Ivanidze, Deborah Zhang, Meem Mahmud, Weiye Yasen, Lisa Ravdin, Silky Pahlajani, Mony de Leon, Anna S Nordvig, Gloria C Chiang
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Abstract

Amyloid-targeting therapy has recently become widely available in the U.S. for the treatment of patients with symptomatic mild Alzheimer's disease (AD). At present, there are no biomarkers that have been clinical validated to assess treatment response in routine clinical practice; longitudinal amyloid PET could play a role but is not cost effective. This report presents a case series of six patients with AD, whose amyloid positivity was confirmed by PET or CSF biomarkers, who underwent baseline and longitudinal arterial spin-labeling magnetic resonance imaging (ASL-MR) as part of FDA-mandated, clinical standard-of-care, non-contrast MR monitoring to assess for amyloid-related imaging abnormalities (ARIA). We and others have previously reported that ASL-MR can screen for neurodegenerative disease, as a proxy for FDG-PET, and can be easily added on as a cost-effective, repeatable method to monitor post-therapy changes. This series highlights varied cerebral blood flow (CBF) changes in response to lecanemab therapy. For instance, Cases 1, 3, and 5 showed increased CBF after multiple infusions, with subjective cognitive improvement in Case 1 and improved MoCA scores in Case 3. Case 2 showed improved CBF initially before the 5th infusion, but this returned to baseline on the subsequent study, with no cognitive improvement over the course of therapy. Cases 4 and 6 have demonstrated no significant changes in regional CBF thus far on therapy, with cognitive decline in Case 4. This case series underscores the potential utility of ASL-MR as an adjunct sequence to current imaging protocols to monitor treatment response to anti-amyloid therapy.ABBREVIATIONS: ASL-MR= arterial spin-labeling magnetic resonance imaging; MRI= magnetic resonance imaging; CBF= cerebral blood flow; AD= Alzheimer's disease; PET= positron emission tomography; CSF= cerebrospinal fluid; FDG= fluorodeoxyglucose.

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抗淀粉样蛋白治疗和磁共振成像的脑血流变化:治疗反应的潜在纵向生物标志物?
淀粉样蛋白靶向治疗最近在美国广泛用于治疗有症状的轻度阿尔茨海默病(AD)患者。目前,还没有经过临床验证的生物标志物来评估常规临床实践中的治疗反应;纵向淀粉样PET可以发挥作用,但成本效益不高。本报告介绍了6例AD患者的病例系列,这些患者的淀粉样蛋白阳性被PET或CSF生物标志物证实,他们接受了基线和纵向动脉自旋标记磁共振成像(ASL-MR),作为fda规定的临床标准护理的一部分,非对比MR监测来评估淀粉样蛋白相关成像异常(ARIA)。我们和其他人之前报道过ASL-MR可以筛查神经退行性疾病,作为FDG-PET的替代品,并且可以很容易地作为一种成本效益高、可重复的方法来监测治疗后的变化。本系列报道强调了不同的脑血流量(CBF)变化对lecanemab治疗的反应。例如,病例1、病例3、病例5多次输注后CBF增加,病例1主观认知改善,病例3 MoCA评分提高。病例2在第5次输注前表现出改善的CBF,但在随后的研究中恢复到基线,在治疗过程中没有认知改善。到目前为止,病例4和6在治疗中没有显示出区域脑血流的显著变化,病例4的认知能力下降。本病例系列强调了ASL-MR作为当前成像方案的辅助序列来监测抗淀粉样蛋白治疗的治疗反应的潜在效用。缩写:ASL-MR=动脉自旋标记磁共振成像;磁共振成像;脑血流量;AD=阿尔茨海默病;正电子发射断层扫描;CSF=脑脊液;FDG =氟脱氧葡萄糖。
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