AI Article Synopsis

  • * Current assessments often rely on visual interpretation, but using precise quantitative SUV ratios allows for earlier detection of amyloid plaques and tracking of antiamyloid treatment effectiveness.
  • * The Quantitative Imaging Biomarkers Alliance has established guidelines to reduce variability in measurements, leading to high statistical power for study conclusions and improved precision in clinical and research settings.

Article Abstract

A standardized approach to acquiring amyloid PET images increases their value as disease and drug response biomarkers. Most F PET amyloid brain scans often are assessed only visually (per regulatory labels), with a binary decision indicating the presence or absence of Alzheimer disease amyloid pathology. Minimizing technical variance allows precise, quantitative SUV ratios (SUVRs) for early detection of β-amyloid plaques and allows the effectiveness of antiamyloid treatments to be assessed with serial studies. The Quantitative Imaging Biomarkers Alliance amyloid PET biomarker committee developed and validated a profile to characterize and reduce the variability of SUVRs, increasing statistical power for these assessments. On achieving conformance, sites can justify a claim that brain amyloid burden reflected by the SUVR is measurable to a within-subject coefficient of variation of no more than 1.94% when the same radiopharmaceutical, scanner, acquisition, and analysis protocols are used. This overview explains the claim, requirements, barriers, and potential future developments of the profile to achieve precision in clinical and research amyloid PET imaging.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9902844PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2967/jnumed.122.264031DOI Listing

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