Astrogliosis marker 11C-SL25.1188 PET in traumatic brain injury with persistent symptoms

Author:

Koshimori Yuko1,Cusimano Michael D2,Vieira Erica L34,Rusjan Pablo M5,Kish Stephen J146,Vasdev Neil14ORCID,Moriguchi Sho1ORCID,Boileau Isabelle146,Chao Thomas7,Nasser Zahra1,Ishrat Husain M146,Faiz Khunsa8,Braga Joeffre16,Meyer Jeffrey H146

Affiliation:

1. Brain Health Imaging Centre, Azrieli Centre for Neuro-Radiochemistry, and Campbell Family Mental Health Research Institute, CAMH , Toronto, M5T 1R8 , Canada

2. Neurosurgery, St. Michael’s Hospital, University of Toronto , Toronto, M5B 1W8 , Canada

3. Molecular Neurobiology and Campbell Family Mental Health Research Institute, CAMH , Toronto, M5T 1R8 Canada

4. Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto , Toronto, M5T 1R8 Canada

5. Douglas Research Centre and Department of Psychiatry, McGill University , Montreal, H3A 1A1 , Canada

6. Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Toronto , Toronto, M5S 1A8 , Canada

7. Institute of Mental Health, Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia , Vancouver, V6T 2A1 , Canada

8. Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Hamilton Health Sciences, McMaster University , Hamilton, L8S 4K1 , Canada

Abstract

Abstract Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is common but little is known why up to a third of patients have persisting symptoms. Astrogliosis, a pathophysiological response to brain injury, may be a potential therapeutic target, but demonstration of astrogliosis in the brain of humans with TBI and persistent symptoms is lacking. Astroglial marker monoamine oxidase B (MAO-B) total distribution volume (11C-SL25.1188 VT), an index of MAO-B density, was measured in 29 TBI and 29 similarly aged healthy control cases with 11C-SL25.1188 PET, prioritizing prefrontal cortex (PFC) and cortex proximal to cortical convexity. Correlations of PFC 11C-SL25.1188 VT with psychomotor and processing speed; and serum blood measures implicated in astrogliosis were determined. 11C-SL25.1188 VT was greater in TBI in PFC (P = 0.00064) and cortex (P = 0.00038). PFC 11C-SL25.1188 VT inversely correlated with Comprehensive Trail Making Test psychomotor and processing speed (r = −0.48, P = 0.01). In participants scanned within 2 years of last TBI, PFC 11C-SL25.1188 VT correlated with serum glial fibrillary acid protein (r = 0.51, P = 0.037) and total tau (r = 0.74, P = 0.001). Elevated 11C-SL25.1188 VT argues strongly for astrogliosis and therapeutics modifying astrogliosis towards curative phenotypes should be tested in TBI with persistent symptoms. Given substantive effect size, astrogliosis PET markers should be applied to stratify cases and/or assess target engagement for putative therapeutics targeting astrogliosis.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Canadian Institute for Military and Veteran Health Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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