The variability of translocator protein signal in brain and blood of genotyped healthy humans using in vivo 123I-CLINDE SPECT imaging: A test-retest study

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123I-CLINDE is a radiotracer developed for SPECT and targets the 18-kDa translocator protein (TSPO). TSPO is upregulated in glial cells and used as a measure of neuroinflammation in a variety of central nervous system diseases. The aim of this study was to examine the test-retest variability of 123I-CLINDE binding in healthy subjects. Methods: SPECT scans were acquired over 90 min in 16 healthy controls (9 women, 8 mixed-affinity binders [MABs] and 8 high-affinity binders [HABs] twice with an interval of 35 6 15 d). Arterial input functions were based on individual blood measurements in 8 subjects and a population-based approach in combination with individual whole-blood time-activity curves in the other 8 subjects. Seven brain volumes of interest were extracted and quantified by SUVs and by 2-tissue-compartment modeling for calculation of distribution volumes (VT). Test-retest variability was measured by percentage difference (PD), the absolute PD, intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), and coefficient of variation. Results: The absolute PD of brain SUV and the VT had similar values. The ICC values were higher for VTs than for brain SUVs, which were both moderate to high; however, lower ICC values were observed when calculated separately for HABs and MABs. Test-retest reproducibility was higher in subjects with immediate centrifugation of blood samples. The population-based method efficiently recovered data with delayed centrifugation. The VT of a 49-y-old male HAB was 7.5 6 1.4 mL/cm3 compared with 4.6 6 1.4 mL/cm3 of a sex-and age-matched MAB. The SUVs of a 49-y-old male HAB and MAB were 1.03 6 0.14 and 0.88 6 0.15 g/mL, respectively. Conclusion: The test-retest reproducibility of 123I-CLINDE is comparable or better than that reported for commonly used PET TSPO tracers. Because of the binding of 123I-CLINDE to blood cells and peripheral tissues, SUV is not a sufficient surrogate of VT from2-tissue-compartmentmodeling. The population-adjusted method has the potential to reduce the complexity of blood analyses of TSPO tracers.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Nuclear Medicine
Volume58
Issue number6
Pages (from-to)989-995
Number of pages7
ISSN0161-5505
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017

    Research areas

  • Polymorphism, Secondgeneration TSPO tracer, TSPO imaging, Variability

ID: 196913964