- Pittsburgh compound B
Pittsburgh Compound B (PiB) is a
fluorescent derivative ofThioflavin T , which can be used inpositron emission tomography scans to imagebeta-amyloid plaques inneuronal tissue . Due to this property, Pittsburgh Compound B may be used in investigational studies ofAlzheimer's Disease .History of PiB
The definitive diagnosis of
Alzheimer's Disease can only be made following the demonstration of the presence ofbeta-amyloid plaques andNeurofibrillary tangles , the pathologic hallmarks ofAlzheimer's Disease in brain tissue, typically at autopsy. While the cognitive impairments of the disease could be monitored throughout the disease course, clinicians had no reliable way to monitor the pathologic progression of the disease. Due to this fact, a clear understanding of the process of amyloid deposition and how amyloid deposits relate to the cognitive symptoms ofAlzheimer's Disease remains to be elucidated. While sophisticated centers for the treatment ofAlzheimer's Disease are able to diagnose the disease with some reliability based on its clinical presentation, thedifferential diagnosis ofAlzheimer's Disease from otherdementias is less robust. Furthermore, as novel disease-modifying therapies forAlzheimer's Disease that attack and removebeta-amyloid deposits from the brain enter clinical trials, a tool for assessing their effectiveness at clearing the amyloid deposits was a much needed development.To answer these needs, a research team from the
University of Pittsburgh led by geriatric psychiatrist William E. Klunk and radiochemist Chester A. Mathis identified a class of neutrally chargedbenzothiazoles derived fromThioflavin T , which included a small number compounds with suitable properties for use as apositron emission tomography imaging agent. One of these compounds, [N-methyl-11C] 2-(4'-methylaminophenyl)-6-hydroxybenzothiazole, emerged as the lead agent to develop in human subjects. TheUniversity of Pittsburgh team partnered with a team of researchers fromUppsala University inUppsala ,Sweden , to conduct the first trials of this new agent in human research subjects. As this was the second investigational compound of this class sent to Uppsala from theUniversity of Pittsburgh group, it was termed simply Pittsburgh compound-B by the Swedish team, who also abbreviated it as "PiB".The first PiB study of a human subject with a clinical diagnosis of
Alzheimer's Disease was conducted in February, 2002, atUppsala University . PET scans showed that the compound was retained in areas of thecerebral cortex known to contain significant amyloid deposits from post-mortem examinations. The initial human study of PiB was expanded to include 16Alzheimer's Disease subjects and 9 cognitively normal controls, the report of which was published in 2004 in the Annals of Neurology [Klunk, W.E., et al., Imaging brain amyloid in Alzheimer's disease with Pittsburgh Compound-B. [see comment] . Annals of Neurology, 2004. 55(3): p. 306-19.] .Since that initial study, PiB has been adopted as a research tool by dozens of research institutions around the world. PiB and other compounds in its class are protected under U.S.
patent number 7,270,800, issued Sept. 18, 2007, which is presently assigned to theUniversity of Pittsburgh . The technology is under license toGE Healthcare , a subsidiary ofGeneral Electric , who is pursuing the development of a clinical diagnostic agent based on PiB for assessing brainamyloidosis .Published Clinical Research Studies using PiB
References
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