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Dive into the research topics where Mark A. Mintun is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark A. Mintun.


Annals of Neurology | 2012

Amyloid deposition, hypometabolism, and longitudinal cognitive decline

Susan M. Landau; Mark A. Mintun; Abhinay D. Joshi; Robert A. Koeppe; Ronald C. Petersen; Paul S. Aisen; Michael W. Weiner; William J. Jagust

Using data from the Alzheimers Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) population, we examined (1) cross‐sectional relationships between amyloid deposition, hypometabolism, and cognition, and (2) associations between amyloid and hypometabolism measurements and longitudinal cognitive measurements.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Serotonin signaling is associated with lower amyloid-β levels and plaques in transgenic mice and humans

John R. Cirrito; Brianne M. Disabato; Jessica L. Restivo; Deborah K. Verges; Whitney D. Goebel; Anshul Sathyan; Davinder Hayreh; Gina D'Angelo; Tammie L.S. Benzinger; Hyejin Yoon; Jungsu Kim; John C. Morris; Mark A. Mintun; Yvette I. Sheline

Aggregation of amyloid-β (Aβ) as toxic oligomers and amyloid plaques within the brain appears to be the pathogenic event that initiates Alzheimers disease (AD) lesions. One therapeutic strategy has been to reduce Aβ levels to limit its accumulation. Activation of certain neurotransmitter receptors can regulate Aβ metabolism. We assessed the ability of serotonin signaling to alter brain Aβ levels and plaques in a mouse model of AD and in humans. In mice, brain interstitial fluid (ISF) Aβ levels were decreased by 25% following administration of several selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressant drugs. Similarly, direct infusion of serotonin into the hippocampus reduced ISF Aβ levels. Serotonin-dependent reductions in Aβ were reversed if mice were pretreated with inhibitors of the extracellular regulated kinase (ERK) signaling cascade. Chronic treatment with an SSRI, citalopram, caused a 50% reduction in brain plaque load in mice. To test whether serotonin signaling could impact Aβ plaques in humans, we retrospectively compared brain amyloid load in cognitively normal elderly participants who were exposed to antidepressant drugs within the past 5 y to participants who were not. Antidepressant-treated participants had significantly less amyloid load as quantified by positron emission tomography (PET) imaging with Pittsburgh Compound B (PIB). Cumulative time of antidepressant use within the 5-y period preceding the scan correlated with less plaque load. These data suggest that serotonin signaling was associated with less Aβ accumulation in cognitively normal individuals.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2018

Trial of Solanezumab for Mild Dementia Due to Alzheimer’s Disease

Lawrence S. Honig; Bruno Vellas; Michael M Woodward; Mercè Boada; Roger Bullock; Michael Borrie; Klaus Hager; Niels Andreasen; Elio Scarpini; Hong Liu-Seifert; Michael Case; Robert A. Dean; Ann Marie Hake; Karen Sundell; Vicki Poole Hoffmann; Christopher Carlson; Rashna Khanna; Mark A. Mintun; Ronald B. DeMattos; Katherine Selzler; Eric Siemers

BACKGROUND Alzheimers disease is characterized by amyloid‐beta (Aβ) plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. The humanized monoclonal antibody solanezumab was designed to increase the clearance from the brain of soluble Aβ, peptides that may lead to toxic effects in the synapses and precede the deposition of fibrillary amyloid. METHODS We conducted a double‐blind, placebo‐controlled, phase 3 trial involving patients with mild dementia due to Alzheimers disease, defined as a Mini–Mental State Examination (MMSE) score of 20 to 26 (on a scale from 0 to 30, with higher scores indicating better cognition) and with amyloid deposition shown by means of florbetapir positron‐emission tomography or Aβ1‐42 measurements in cerebrospinal fluid. Patients were randomly assigned to receive solanezumab at a dose of 400 mg or placebo intravenously every 4 weeks for 76 weeks. The primary outcome was the change from baseline to week 80 in the score on the 14‐item cognitive subscale of the Alzheimers Disease Assessment Scale (ADAS‐cog14; scores range from 0 to 90, with higher scores indicating greater cognitive impairment). RESULTS A total of 2129 patients were enrolled, of whom 1057 were assigned to receive solanezumab and 1072 to receive placebo. The mean change from baseline in the ADAS‐cog14 score was 6.65 in the solanezumab group and 7.44 in the placebo group, with no significant between‐group difference at week 80 (difference, ‐0.80; 95% confidence interval, ‐1.73 to 0.14; P=0.10). As a result of the failure to reach significance with regard to the primary outcome in the prespecified hierarchical analysis, the secondary outcomes were considered to be descriptive and are reported without significance testing. The change from baseline in the MMSE score was ‐3.17 in the solanezumab group and ‐3.66 in the placebo group. Adverse cerebral edema or effusion lesions that were observed on magnetic resonance imaging after randomization occurred in 1 patient in the solanezumab group and in 2 in the placebo group. CONCLUSIONS Solanezumab at a dose of 400 mg administered every 4 weeks in patients with mild Alzheimers disease did not significantly affect cognitive decline. (Funded by Eli Lilly; EXPEDITION3 ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01900665.)


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 2017

Quantitation of PET signal as an adjunct to visual interpretation of florbetapir imaging

Michael J. Pontecorvo; Anupa K. Arora; Marybeth Devine; Ming Lu; Nick Galante; Andrew Siderowf; Catherine Devadanam; Abhinay D. Joshi; Stephen L. Heun; Brian F. Teske; Stephen P. Truocchio; Michael Krautkramer; Michael D. Devous; Mark A. Mintun

PurposeThis study examined the feasibility of using quantitation to augment interpretation of florbetapir PET amyloid imaging.MethodsA total of 80 physician readers were trained on quantitation of florbetapir PET images and the principles for using quantitation to augment a visual read. On day 1, the readers completed a visual read of 96 scans (46 autopsy-verified and 50 from patients seeking a diagnosis). On day 2, 69 of the readers reinterpreted the 96 scans augmenting their interpretation with quantitation (VisQ method) using one of three commercial software packages. A subset of 11 readers reinterpreted all scans on day 2 based on a visual read only (VisVis control). For the autopsy-verified scans, the neuropathologist’s modified CERAD plaque score was used as the truth standard for interpretation accuracy. Because an autopsy truth standard was not available for scans from patients seeking a diagnosis, the majority VisQ interpretation of the three readers with the best accuracy in interpreting autopsy-verified scans was used as the reference standard.ResultsDay 1 visual read accuracy was high for both the autopsy-verified scans (90%) and the scans from patients seeking a diagnosis (87.3%). Accuracy improved from the visual read to the VisQ read (from 90.1% to 93.1%, p < 0.0001). Importantly, access to quantitative information did not decrease interpretation accuracy of the above-average readers (>90% on day 1). Accuracy in interpreting the autopsy-verified scans also increased from the first to the second visual read (VisVis group). However, agreement with the reference standard (best readers) for scans from patients seeking a diagnosis did not improve with a second visual read, and in this cohort the VisQ group was significantly improved relative to the VisVis group (change 5.4% vs. −1.1%, p < 0.0001).ConclusionThese results indicate that augmentation of visual interpretation of florbetapir PET amyloid images with quantitative information obtained using commercially available software packages did not reduce the accuracy of readers who were already performing with above average accuracy on the visual read and may improve the accuracy and confidence of some readers in clinically relevant cases.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2017

Flortaucipir F 18 Quantitation Using Parametric Estimation of Reference Signal Intensity

Sudeepti Southekal; Michael D. Devous; Ian Kennedy; Michael Navitsky; Ming Lu; Abhinay D. Joshi; Michael J. Pontecorvo; Mark A. Mintun

PET imaging of tau pathology in Alzheimer disease may benefit from the use of white matter reference regions. These regions have shown reduced variability compared with conventional cerebellar regions in amyloid imaging. However, they are susceptible to contamination from partial-volume blurring of tracer uptake in the cortex. We present a new technique, PERSI (Parametric Estimation of Reference Signal Intensity), for flortaucipir F 18 count normalization that leverages the advantages of white matter reference regions while mitigating potential partial-volume effects. Methods: Subjects with a clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer disease, mild cognitive impairment, or normal cognition underwent T1-weighted MRI and florbetapir imaging (to determine amyloid [Aβ] status) at screening and flortaucipir F 18 imaging at single or multiple time points. Flortaucipir F 18 images, acquired as 4 × 5 min frames 80 min after a 370-MBq injection, were motion-corrected, averaged, and transformed to Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) space. The PERSI reference region was calculated for each scan by fitting a bimodal gaussian distribution to the voxel-intensity histogram within an atlas-based white matter region and using the center and width of the lower-intensity peak to identify the voxel intensities to be included. Four conventional reference regions were also evaluated: whole cerebellum, cerebellar gray matter, atlas-based white matter, and subject-specific white matter. SUVr (standardized uptake value ratio) was calculated for a statistically defined neocortical volume of interest. Performance was evaluated with respect to test–retest variability in a phase 2 study of 21 subjects (5–34 d between scans). Baseline variability in controls (SD of SUVr and ΔSUVr) and effect sizes for group differences (Cohen d; Aβ-positive impaired vs. Aβ-negative normal) were evaluated in another phase 2 study with cross-sectional data (n = 215) and longitudinal data (n = 142/215; 18 ± 2 mo between scans). Results: PERSI showed superior test–retest reproducibility (1.84%) and group separation ability (cross-sectional Cohen d = 9.45; longitudinal Cohen d = 2.34) compared with other reference regions. Baseline SUVr variability and ΔSUVr were minimal in Aβ control subjects with no specific flortaucipir F 18 uptake (SUVr, 1.0 ± 0.04; ΔSUVr, 0.0 ± 0.02). Conclusion: PERSI reduced variability while enhancing discrimination between diagnostic cohorts. Such improvements could lead to more accurate disease staging and robust measurements of changes in tau burden over time for the evaluation of putative therapies.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2017

Test–Retest Reproducibility for the Tau PET Imaging Agent Flortaucipir F 18

Michael D. Devous; Abhinay D. Joshi; Michael Navitsky; Sudeepti Southekal; Michael J. Pontecorvo; Haiqing Shen; Ming Lu; William R. Shankle; John Seibyl; Ken Marek; Mark A. Mintun

Alzheimer disease (AD) is characterized by β-amyloid (Aβ) plaques and tau neurofibrillary tangles. There are several PET imaging biomarkers for Aβ including 11C-PiB and 18F-florbetapir. Recently, PET tracers for tau neurofibrillary tangles have become available and have shown utility in detection and monitoring of neurofibrillary pathology over time. Flortaucipir F 18 is one such tracer. Initial clinical studies indicated greater tau binding in AD and mild cognitive impairment patients than in controls in a pattern consistent with tau pathology observed at autopsy. However, little is known about the reproducibility of such findings. To our knowledge, this study reports the first data regarding test–retest reproducibility of flortaucipir F 18 PET. Methods: Twenty-one subjects who completed the study (5 healthy controls, 6 mild cognitive impairment, and 10 AD) received 370 MBq of flortaucipir F 18 and were imaged for 20 min beginning 80 min after injection and again at 110 min after injection. Follow-up (retest) imaging occurred between 48 h and 4 wk after initial imaging. Images were spatially normalized to Montreal Neurological Institute template space. SUVRs were calculated using AAL (Automated Anatomical Labeling atlas) volumes of interest (VOIs) for parietal, temporal, occipital, anterior, and posterior hippocampal, parahippocampal, and fusiform regions, as well as a posterior neocortical VOI composed of average values from parietal, temporal, and occipital areas. Further, a VOI derived by discriminant analysis that maximally separated diagnostic groups (multiblock barycentric discriminant analysis [MUBADA]) was used. All VOIs were referenced to a subsection of cerebellar gray matter (cere-crus) as well as a parametrically derived white matter–based reference region (parametric estimate of reference signal intensity [PERSI]). t test, correlation analyses, and intraclass correlation coefficient were used to explore test–retest performance. Results: Test–retest analyses demonstrated low variability in flortaucipir F 18 SUVR. The SD of mean percentage change between test and retest using the PERSI reference region was 2.22% for a large posterior neocortical VOI, 1.84% for MUBADA, 1.46% for frontal, 1.98% for temporal, 2.28% for parietal, and 3.27% for occipital VOIs. Further, significant correlations (R2 > 0.85; P < 0.001) were observed for all regions, and intraclass correlation coefficient values (test–retest consistency) were greater than 0.92 for all regions. Conclusion: Significant test–retest reproducibility for flortaucipir F 18 was found across neocortical and mesial temporal lobe structures. These preliminary data suggest that flortaucipir F 18 tau imaging could be used to examine changes in tau burden over time.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 2015

Quantification of 18F-florbetapir PET: comparison of two analysis methods

Chloe Hutton; Jerome Declerck; Mark A. Mintun; Michael J. Pontecorvo; Michael D. Devous; Abhinay D. Joshi


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2015

[18F]T807 ([18F]AV-1451) and Fluorescent Analog T726 Bind to PHF-Tau but Not TDP-43 in Alzheimer’s and FTD Post-Mortem Brain Tissue Sections

Qianwa Liang; Yin-Guo Lin; Felipe Gomez; Eileen H. Bigio; Thomas G. Beach; Mark A. Mintun; Giorgio Attardo


Анналы клинической и экспериментальной неврологии | 2010

Регионарная характеристика накопления бета-амилоида на доклинической и клинической стадиях болезни Альцгеймера

Андрей Геннадьевич Власенко; John Morris; Mark A. Mintun


Archive | 2001

PRIORITY COMMUNICATION Increased Amygdala Response to Masked Emotional Faces in Depressed Subjects Resolves with Antidepressant Treatment: An fMRI Study

Yvette I. Sheline; M Deanna; Julie M. Donnelly; John M. Ollinger; Abraham Z. Snyder; Mark A. Mintun

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Ming Lu

Eli Lilly and Company

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Yvette I. Sheline

University of Pennsylvania

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Anshul Sathyan

Washington University in St. Louis

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