Agneta K. Nordberg, Sweden

Karolinska Institutet Neurobiology Care Sciences and Society, Center for Alzheimer research
Dr Agneta Nordberg obtained her MD, PhD at Uppsala University, Sweden and is professor in Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet and Senior Consultant, Theme Aging, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm. Her research group at Karolinska institutet, Division of Clinical Geriatrics, Center for Alzheimer Research has a translational research approach using in vitro and in vivo molecular brain imaging techniques, with the aim to characterize the complex pathophysiological features of neurodegenerative diseases, with a strong focus on Alzheimer´s disease but also on other proteinopathies, in order to develop new early diagnostic markers and new drug targets for early intervention in disease process. Agneta Nordberg has pioneered in field of cholinergic neurotransmission and nicotinic acetylcholine receptors as well as in the development of amyloid PET imaging and introducing the multi-tracer PET concept in patients with different dementia disorders. Her research today is presently focussing on a deeper understanding of tau and astrocytes interactions in different tauopathies. She has published over 500 scientific original articles and reviews (h index 77) and being PI for more than 15 clinical PET trials. She has received several prizes and rewards as 2020 Grand Prix for European Alzheimer Research, Fondation Recerche sur Alzheimer, France, 2016 Grand Silver Medal Karolinska Institutet, 2014 Queen Silvia prize, 2013 Wailet and Eric Forsgren prize, 2006 Alois Alzheimer Award, 2004 Imaging Award Alz org USA. 2002 Life Achievement Award , ADRD conference, 2002 Inga Sandeborg Alzheimer prize, 2001 Luigi Amaducci award .

Moderator of 2 Sessions

LIVE SYMPOSIUM DISCUSSION

LIVE DISCUSSION - AMYLOID AND TAU PET IMAGING

Date
12.03.2021, Friday
Session Time
15:30 - 16:00
Session Icon
Live
LIVE SYMPOSIUM DISCUSSION

LIVE DISCUSSION - DIAGNOSTICS, BIOMARKERS, IMAGING IN AD, PD AND LBD 1

Date
13.03.2021, Saturday
Session Time
17:30 - 18:00
Session Icon
Live

Presenter of 4 Presentations

MULTIMODAL TRANSLATIONAL IMAGING: ASSOCIATION OF AMYLOID,TAU,ASTROGLIOSIS AND SYNAPSE LOSS IN AD AND NON-AD DEMENTIA.

Session Type
SYMPOSIUM
Date
12.03.2021, Friday
Session Time
08:00 - 10:00
Room
On Demand Symposia A
Lecture Time
08:30 - 08:45
Session Icon
On-Demand

Abstract

Abstract Body

Aims

To use multimodal imaging to map important pathophysiological processes and delineate the outmost driving forces for the clinical phenotypes in Alzheimer´s disease (AD) and non-AD dementia.

Methods

We use a translational approach from multimodal tracer in vivo PET imaging to in vitro PET tracer binding in post-mortem brain tissue measuring amyloid, tau, astrogliosis and synapse loss.

Results

We observe a negative correlation between MAO-B inhibitor 11C-deprenyl (astrogliosis) and 11C-PIB (amyloid ) levels but a positive correlation between 11C-deprenyl and 18F-FDG (cerebral glucose metabolism) PET at early stages of preclinical /prodromal AD. This early sign of high astrogliosis may reflect an increase in neuroprotective astrocytic forms (A2) .In post-mortem AD brain an increased 3H-deprenyl binding positively correlates with amyloid load and probably represent the toxic astrocytic form (A1) although the astrocyte tracers deprenyl and BU99008 both show multiple binding sites in AD brain tissue. Deprenyl PET studies are for comparison ongoing in frontotemporal lobe dementia. Tau PET binding increases with progression of AD and show less correlation with PIB PET but negative correlation with FDG PET and cognition (episodic memory). Tau PET seems to better predict future cognitive decline than amyloid or FDG PET in AD. Characterization of the binding properties of the synapse protein tracer 3H-UCBJ is ongoing in post-mortem brain tissue to be continued by PET studies in early AD and non-AD dementia.

Conclusions

Multimodal PET tracer imaging will increase the precision of early diagnosis, clinical prognosis and development and assessment of outcome of new drug treatment strategies.

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