Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT00612872

Evaluation of [123I]CLINDE and SPECT as a Marker of Inflammation in Subjects With PD or AD and in Healthy Subjects

Evaluation of [123I]CLINDE and SPECT as a Marker of Inflammation in Subjects With Parkinson Disease or Alzheimer Disease and in Healthy Subjects

Status
Terminated
Phase
Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
46 (actual)
Sponsor
Institute for Neurodegenerative Disorders · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
30 Years – 50 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

To assess the dynamic uptake and washout of 123-I CLINDE, a potential imaging biomarker for inflammatory changes in brain, using single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in similarly aged healthy controls and subjects with Alzheimer (AD) or Parkinson disease (PD). To perform blood metabolite characterization of 123-I CLINDE in healthy and subjects with AD or PD to determine the nature of metabolites in assessment of 123-I CLINDE as a single photon computed tomography (SPECT) brain imaging agent. Evaluate the test/retest reproducibility of 123-I CLINDE, and SPECT in AD and PD subjects and healthy controls

Detailed description

When microglia become activated they express peripheral benzodiazepine receptors (PBR) or binding sites on their mitochondrial membrane. PBRs are functionally and structurally distinct from central benzodiazepine receptors associated with y-aminiobutric acid (GABA)-regulated chloride channels. PBRs are found in abundance in peripheral organs and hematologic cells, but are present at only very low levels in the normal central nervous system (Banati, 2002). CLINDE is a phenylimidazopyridine and appears to bind selectively to the PBR. In the absence of excessive blood in the CNS an increase CLINDE binding to PBR is a potential marker of microglial activation in the CNS. The increase in CLINDE binding may be an indicator of the transition of microglia from a resting to an activated state. When labeled with 123-I and used as a SPECT radiotracer, CLINDE may serve as an in vivo marker of microglial activation in Alzheimer disease and Parkinson disease. The 123-I radioactive tag offers distinct advantages for large-scale clinical imaging studies of anti-inflammatory targeted treatments as a marker of microglial activation and efficacy of therapeutic intervention. The half-life (13.1 h) of 123-I permits imaging in multiple subjects in a single research-dedicated imaging center, with multiple research subjects per day. This minimizes variability introduced in multi-center quantitative imaging trials where different cameras, image processing methods, and QA procedures all conspire to increase the variance imaging biomarkers. Using this model, our group pioneered a method to evaluate the loss of dopamine function in Parkinson's disease using a radioactive drug 123-I β-CIT which binds directly to dopamine nerve terminals. The adaptation of imaging agents like 123-I CLINDE as a biomarker of microglial activation in neurodegenerative diseases requires human validation studies. Expanding upon our previous work with b-amyloid ligands (123I-IMPY, 123-I MNI-187) for AD and dopamine transporter ligands (123-I B-CIT, Altropane) for PD, we desire to develop and characterize 123-I CLINDE as a potential marker for microglial activation in association with neuronal damage that may be applicable to multiple neurodegenerative diseases. Ultimately a marker of microglial activation could be used for large-scale quantitative brain imaging trials in AD or PD, specifically to investigate the agent as an objective biomarker in treatments aimed at reducing inflammatory changes in these conditions. The significance of this work lies in applying state-of-art quantitative neuroimaging tools to develop a relevant biomarker in individuals with neurodegenerative diseases with the intention of using this efficiently in large clinical imaging trials.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUG[123I]CLINDESubjects will be injected with up to 5 mCi and not to exceed 5.5 (not \>10% of 5 mCi limit) of 123-I CLINDE followed by serial SPECT imaging.

Timeline

Start date
2008-01-01
Primary completion
2009-11-01
Completion
2009-11-01
First posted
2008-02-12
Last updated
2019-04-03

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00612872. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.