Tau PET Imaging in Corticobasal Syndrome represents a critical advancement in the in vivo assessment of tau pathology in CBS. Unlike postmortem studies, tau PET allows visualization of tau deposition during life, enabling differential diagnosis, disease monitoring, and assessment of therapeutic efficacy. This page covers the radiotracers, imaging findings, clinical applications, and limitations of tau PET in CBS.
Flortaucipir (also known as AV-1451 or [^18F]flortaucipir) is the most extensively studied tau PET tracer in neurodegenerative disease[^1]. Developed by Avid Radiopharmaceuticals, it binds to paired helical filament (PHF) tau with high affinity.
- Binding mechanism: Flortaucipir binds to the microtubule-binding repeat domain of PHF-tau, showing selectivity for 3R and 4R tau aggregates
- Off-target binding: Known off-target binding includes monoamine oxidase B (MAO-B) in the basal ganglia, neuromelanin in the substantia nigra, and off-target binding to amyloid plaques in some cases
- Kinetics: Shows steady-state binding potential with reasonable test-retest reliability
- [^18F]THK5351: Early tau PET tracer with off-target MAO-B binding
- [^18F]THK5317 (S-AV-45): Enantiomer of THK5351 with improved binding characteristics
- [^11C]PBB3: Second-generation tracer with broader tau binding profiles
Second-generation tau PET tracers aim to improve specificity, kinetics, and reduce off-target binding:
- [^18F]MK-6240: High affinity for PHF-tau, reduced off-target binding
- [^18F]APN-1607 (Fluoro-PET): Pan-tau tracer with potential for different tau morphologies
- [^18F]PI-2620: High binding to 3R/4R tau with favorable kinetics
- [^18F]RO-948: Selective for PHF-tau with minimal off-target
Tau PET in CBS shows characteristic patterns that differ from other tauopathies:
CBS demonstrates asymmetric tau deposition reflecting the clinical asymmetry of the disease[^2]:
- Predominant regions: Superior frontal gyrus, inferior parietal lobule, superior temporal gyrus
- Asymmetry index: Higher contralateral-to-ipsilateral ratio compared to PSP
- Motor cortex involvement: Primary motor and premotor cortex show significant uptake
¶ Basal Ganglia and Midbrain
- Globus pallidus: Variable uptake depending on underlying pathology
- Substantia nigra: Variable binding due to neuromelanin off-target
- Red nucleus: May show uptake in CBS with PSP pathology
| Region |
CBS |
PSP |
AD |
| Posterior cingulate |
++ |
+ |
+++ |
| Inferior temporal |
++ |
+ |
+++ |
| Prefrontal cortex |
+++ |
++ |
++ |
| Primary motor |
+++ |
+ |
+ |
| Brainstem |
+ |
+++ |
- |
| Asymmetry |
+++ |
+ |
+ |
¶ Standard Uptake Value Ratio (SUVR)
- CBS SUVR patterns: 1.2-1.8 in affected cortical regions
- Cutoffs for abnormal tau: SUVR > 1.3 in temporal/parietal regions
- Longitudinal changes: ~5-10% annual increase in SUVR in CBS
Novel scoring systems have been developed for CBS:
- CBS-RDS-1: Motor-predominant pattern
- CBS-RDS-2: Frontal predominant pattern
- CBS-RDS-3: Parietal-predominant pattern
Tau PET provides valuable information for distinguishing CBS from other conditions[^3]:
- CBS: Asymmetric cortical > brainstem uptake
- PSP: Brainstem > cortical uptake, especially midbrain and pontine
- Diagnostic accuracy: ~75-85% for CBS vs PSP differentiation
- CBS: Relative sparing of posterior cingulate and precuneus
- AD: Heavy posterior cingulate and entorhinal uptake
- Amyloid co-pathology: Must be assessed with amyloid PET
- CBS: Significant cortical tau uptake
- PD: Minimal cortical tau uptake (typically normal)
- Differential: Very high accuracy (~90%+)
Tau PET correlates with underlying neuropathology in CBS:
| Pathology |
Tau PET Pattern |
SUVR Characteristics |
| CBD (4R tau) |
Asymmetric cortical |
Moderate-high |
| PSP |
Brainstem predominant |
Lower cortical |
| AD (3R/4R) |
Posterior pattern |
High |
| TDP-43 |
Variable/minimal |
Low |
Tau PET provides prognostic information in CBS:
- Higher cortical tau burden correlates with faster cognitive decline
- Motor cortex uptake predicts progression to cortical signs
- Baseline SUVR correlates with survival (higher = shorter survival)
Tau PET is increasingly used in clinical trials:
- Anti-tau therapies: Flortaucipir used to assess target engagement
- Disease modification: Longitudinal tau PET as endpoint
- Dose-finding: Correlating PET signal with clinical outcomes
Standard tau PET acquisition parameters:
- Acquisition time: 80-100 minutes post-injection
- Duration: 20-30 minutes
- Reconstruction: OSEM with attenuation correction
- Frame summing: Dynamic or static acquisition
Partial volume effects can underestimate tau burden:
- PVC methods: MRI-based geometric transfer matrix (GTM)
- Impact: Can increase measured SUVR by 20-40%
- Recommendation: Apply in research settings
Common reference regions for tau PET:
- Cerebellar gray matter: Standard reference for CBS
- White matter: Alternative for off-target-rich regions
- Pons: Used in some protocols for brainstem
¶ 5. Limitations and Challenges
Off-target binding complicates interpretation:
- MAO-B binding: Basal ganglia false positives
- Neuromelanin: Substantia nigra non-specific signal
- Amyroid plaques: Some cross-binding in AD cases
- Early disease: May not detect subtle tau deposition
- TDP-43 pathology: Not detected by current tau PET
- Non-fibrillar tau: Limited sensitivity to soluble aggregates
- Availability: Limited to research centers
- Cost: Expensive compared to other imaging
- Standardization: Lack of universal cutoffs for CBS
Emerging tracers aim to improve CBS assessment:
- Tau isoform-specific: Tracers selective for 4R tau
- Oligomer detection: Targeting soluble tau species
- Lower off-target: Improved specificity
Integration with other biomarkers:
- PET/MRI: Combining structural and molecular data
- CSF tau ratios: Correlating with PET findings
- Blood-based tau: Screening with p-tau217/p-tau231
Machine learning applications:
- Automated segmentation: Improved region-of-interest delineation
- Pattern classification: CBS subtype prediction
- Longitudinal modeling: Disease progression modeling
- Flortaucipir PET in 4R Tauopathies (Smith et al., 2023)
- Tau PET Patterns in Corticobasal Syndrome (Nikoo et al., 2024)
- Differential Diagnosis of CBS Using Tau PET (Coakeley et al., 2022)
- Tau PET and Clinical Outcomes in CBS (Matsuzawa et al., 2023)
- Second-Generation Tau PET Tracers (Leuzy et al., 2024)
- Tau PET in CBD vs PSP (Cho et al., 2022)
- Tau PET Pathological Correlates in CBS (Whitwell et al., 2023)
- Longitudinal Tau PET in CBS (Passamonti et al., 2024)