Radiotracers to detect early Parkinson’s disease
Technology Description
Researchers at Washington University in St. Louis, led by Dr. Zhude Tu, have developed two imaging agents for α-synuclein (α-syn) aggregation for use to diagnose early Parkinson’s disease, track disease progression, and assess efficacy of disease-modifying therapies. Data showed these imaging agents had high brain uptake, suitable brain washout pharmacokinetics, and, more importantly, no presence of lipophilic radio-metabolites in the brain confounding the PET measurement.
The aggregation of misfolded α-syn is a pathological hallmark of Parkinson’s disease; however, no reliable imaging biomarker is currently available for α-syn.
Above: PET characterization of radioligands in the macaque brain. Left: Time-activity curve for microPET study in the brain, SUV: standardized uptake value; Right: Representative PET images of two radiotracers in the macaque brain, weighted average of 0-120 min.
Stage of Research
- Proof of concept has been demonstrated in vivo with murine and non-human primate models
Publications
- Yanbo Yu, et al., Radiosynthesis and biological evaluation of two 18F-labeled PET radioligands for α-synuclein. JNM, Vol. 64, Issue supplement 1, (2023)
Applications
- Diagnostic for early Parkinson’s disease
- Together, these agents with high potency and selectivity for α-syn have great potential to being a therapeutic drug that targets α-syn
Key Advantages
- Early diagnosis, specific, crosses blood-brain barrier, favorable washout kinetics
Patents
- Pending
Related Web Links
- Dr. Zhude Tu, Profile