A Systematic Review on Dementia and Translocator Protein (TSPO): When Nuclear Medicine Highlights an Underlying Expression

Author:

Conte Miriam1ORCID,De Feo Maria Silvia1,Corica Ferdinando1,Gorica Joana1,Sidrak Marko Magdi Abdou1,De Cristofaro Flaminia1,Filippi Luca2ORCID,Ricci Maria3ORCID,De Vincentis Giuseppe1ORCID,Frantellizzi Viviana1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiological Sciences, Oncology and Anatomo-Pathology, Sapienza, University of Rome, 00161 Rome, Italy

2. Department of Nuclear Medicine, Santa Maria Goretti Hospital, 04100 Latina, Italy

3. Nuclear Medicine Unit, Cardarelli Hospital, 86100 Campobasso, Italy

Abstract

Background: Translocator protein (TSPO) is a neuroinflammation hallmark. Different TSPO affinity compounds have been produced and over time, the techniques of radiolabeling have been refined. The aim of this systematic review is to summarize the development of new radiotracers for dementia and neuroinflammation imaging. Methods: An online search of the literature was conducted in the PubMed, Scopus, Medline, Cochrane Library, and Web of Science databases, selecting published studies from January 2004 to December 2022. The accepted studies considered the synthesis of TSPO tracers for nuclear medicine imaging in dementia and neuroinflammation. Results: A total of 50 articles was identified. Twelve papers were selected from the included studies’ bibliographies and 34 were excluded. Thus, 28 articles were ultimately selected for quality assessment. Conclusion: Huge efforts in developing specific and stable tracers for PET/SPECT imaging have been made. The long half-life of 18F makes this isotope a preferable choice to 11C. An emerging limitation to this however is that neuroinflammation involves all of the brain which inhibits the possibility of detecting a slight inflammation status change in patients. A partial solution to this is using the cerebellum as a reference region and developing higher TSPO affinity tracers. Moreover, it is necessary to consider the presence of distomers and racemic compounds interfering with pharmacological tracers’ effects and increasing the noise ratio in images.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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