Abstract

Objective To explore the feasibility of statistical parametric mapping (SPM) aided semi-quantitative analysis in 11C-Pittsburgh compound B (PIB) β-amyloid (Aβ) PET imaging acquired by hybrid PET/MR, and evaluate its possibility in assisting the diagnosis or differential diagnosis for cognitive impairment. Methods From January 2018 to September 2019, 13 Alzheimer′s disease (AD) patients (4 males, 9 females; age (59.2±5.8) years) and 10 vascular cognitive disorders (VCD) patients (9 males, 1 female; age (59.5±11.5) years) who underwent 11C-PIB PET/MR in PET center of Union Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology were retrospectively analyzed. The standardized uptake value ratio (SUVR) of eight key brain regions (cerebral white matter, striatum, thalamus, posterior cingulate gyrus, frontal cortex, posterior parietal cortex, lateral temporal cortex and occipital cortex) to cerebellum cortex were obtained by manual delineation and SPM-aided semi-automatic segmentation with the help of synchronous three-dimensional T1 weighted imaging (3D T1WI). Pearson correlation analysis was carried out on the SUVR obtained by the two methods. Independent-sample t test and paired t test were used to analyze the data. Results There was no significant difference between AD group and VCD group in age and Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score (19.7±4.7 vs 21.7±3.8; t values: 0.095 and 1.098, both P>0.05). Except thalamus(r=0.179, P=0.413), there were good correlations between SUVR obtained by segmentation and delineation in the other 7 key regions (r values: 0.678-0.893, all P<0.05). The SUVR of 8 key regions obtained by the two methods in AD group was significantly higher than that in VCD group (1.519-2.055 vs 1.105-1.618; t values: 2.799-11.582, all P<0.01). The SUVR of striatum (1.942±0.205), posterior cingulate gyrus (1.915±0.249), frontal lobe (1.983±0.264), parietal lobe (2.008±0.296) and temporal cortex (1.931±0.254) in AD group was significantly higher than that of cerebral white matter (1.746±0.192; t values: 3.793-6.992, all P<0.01). But in VCD group, there was no region with the SUVR higher than that of cerebral white matter. Conclusions Hybrid PET/MR can acquire the PET and MRI images synchronously, which can realize the accurate brain segmentation and obtain the semi-quantitative data of key brain regions aided by SPM. The method can analyze the characteristics and differences of amyloid imaging in AD and VCD, which is expected to provide an accurate imaging analysis method for the diagnosis and differential diagnosis of cognitive disorders. Key words: Alzheimer disease; Cognition disorders; Amyloid; Positron-emission tomography; Magnetic resonance imaging

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