Striatal Dopamine Loss in Early Parkinson's Disease: Systematic Review and Novel Analysis of Dopamine Transporter Imaging

Author:

Heng Nicholas1ORCID,Malek Naveed2,Lawton Michael A.3,Nodehi Anahita3,Pitz Vanessa1ORCID,Grosset Katherine A.1,Ben‐Shlomo Yoav3,Grosset Donald G.1

Affiliation:

1. School of Neuroscience and Psychology University of Glasgow Glasgow Scotland UK

2. Department of Neurology Queen's Hospital Romford Essex UK

3. Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School University of Bristol Bristol UK

Abstract

ABSTRACTBackgroundNeuropathological studies, based on small samples, suggest that symptoms of Parkinson's disease (PD) emerge when dopamine/nigrostriatal loss is around 50–80%. Functional neuroimaging can be applied in larger numbers during life, which allows analysis of the extent of dopamine loss more directly.ObjectiveTo quantify dopamine transporter (DaT) activity by neuroimaging in early PD.MethodsSystematic review and novel analysis of DaT imaging studies in early PD.ResultsIn our systematic review, in 423 unique cases from 27 studies with disease duration of less than 6 years, mean age 58.0 (SD 11.5) years, and mean disease duration 1.8 (SD 1.2) years, striatal loss was 43.5% (95% CI 41.6, 45.4) contralaterally, and 36.0% (95% CI 33.6, 38.3) ipsilaterally. For unilateral PD, in 436 unique cases, mean age 57.5 (SD 10.2) years, and mean disease duration 1.8 (SD 1.4) years, striatal loss was 40.6% (95% CI 38.8, 42.4) contralaterally, and 31.6% (95% CI 29.4, 33.8) ipsilaterally. In our novel analysis of the Parkinson's Progressive Marker Initiative study, 413 cases had 1436 scans performed. For a disease duration of less than 1 year, age was 61.8 (SD 9.8) years, and striatal loss was 51.2% (95% CI 49.1, 53.3) contralaterally and 39.5% (36.9, 42.1) ipsilaterally, giving an overall striatal loss of 45.3% (43.0, 47.6).ConclusionsLoss of striatal DaT activity in early PD is less at 35–45%, rather than the 50–80% striatal dopamine loss estimated to be present at the time of symptom onset, based on backwards extrapolation from autopsy studies.

Funder

AbbVie

Allergan

ASAP

Avid Radiopharmaceuticals

Biogen

Bristol Myers Squibb

Celgene

Denali Therapeutics

Eli Lilly and Company

GE Healthcare

GlaxoSmithKline

Janssen Pharmaceuticals

H. Lundbeck A/S

Merck

Meso Scale Diagnostics

Neurocrine Biosciences

Pfizer

Sanofi Genzyme

Servier

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

UCB

Verily Life Sciences

Voyager Therapeutics

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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