Quantification Supports Amyloid PET Visual Assessment of Challenging Cases: Results from the AMYPAD Diagnostic and Patient Management Study

Several studies have demonstrated strong agreement between routine clinical visual assessment and quantification, suggesting that quantification approaches could support assessment by less experienced readers or in challenging cases. However, all studies to date have implemented a retrospective case...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Nuclear Medicine 2025-01, Vol.66 (1), p.110-116
Hauptverfasser: Collij, Lyduine E, Bischof, Gérard N, Altomare, Daniele, Bader, Ilse, Battle, Mark, Vállez García, David, Lopes Alves, Isadora, Wolz, Robin, Gismondi, Rossella, Stephens, Andrew, Walker, Zuzana, Scheltens, Philip, Nordberg, Agneta, Gispert, Juan Domingo, Drzezga, Alexander, Perissinotti, Andrés, Morbelli, Silvia, Buckley, Christopher, Garibotto, Valentina, Frisoni, Giovanni B, Farrar, Gill, Barkhof, Frederik
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext bestellen
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Several studies have demonstrated strong agreement between routine clinical visual assessment and quantification, suggesting that quantification approaches could support assessment by less experienced readers or in challenging cases. However, all studies to date have implemented a retrospective case collection, and challenging cases were generally underrepresented. We included all participants ( = 741) from the AMYPAD diagnostic and patient management study with available baseline amyloid PET quantification. Quantification was done with the PET-only AmyPype pipeline, providing global Centiloid and regional scores. Visual assessment was performed by local readers for the entire cohort. From the total cohort, we selected a subsample of 85 cases for which the amyloid status based on the local reader's visual assessment and the Centiloid classification (cutoff = 21) was discordant or that were assessed with low confidence (i.e., ≤3 on a 5-point scale) by the local reader. In addition, concordant negative ( = 8) and positive ( = 8) scans across tracers were selected. In this sample ( = 101 cases; [ F]flutemetamol, = 48; [ F]florbetaben, = 53), the visual assessments and corresponding confidence by 5 certified independent central readers were captured before and after disclosure of the quantification results. For the whole AMYPAD diagnostic and patient management study cohort, overall assessment by local readers highly agreed with Centiloid status (κ = 0.85, 92.3% agreement). This was consistently observed within disease stages (subjective cognitive decline-plus, κ = 0.82, 92.3% agreement; mild cognitive impairment, κ = 0.80, 89.8% agreement; dementia, κ = 0.87, 94.6% agreement). Across all central reader assessments in the challenging subsample, quantification of global Centiloid and regional scores was considered supportive of visual reads in 70.3% and 49.3% of assessments, respectively. After disclosure of the quantitative results, we observed improvement in concordance across the 5 readers (baseline κ = 0.65, 65.3% agreement; κ after disclosure = 0.74, 73.3% agreement) and a significant increase in reader confidence (baseline mean ( ) = 4.0 vs. after disclosure = 4.34, Wilcoxon statistic ( ) = 101,056, < 0.001). In this clinical study enriched for challenging amyloid PET cases, we demonstrate the value of quantification to support visual assessment. After disclosure, both interreader agreement and confidence showed significant improvement. These results are
ISSN:0161-5505
1535-5667
1535-5667
2159-662X
DOI:10.2967/jnumed.124.268119