RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 White Matter Reference Region in PET Studies of 11C-Pittsburgh Compound B Uptake: Effects of Age and Amyloid-β Deposition JF Journal of Nuclear Medicine JO J Nucl Med FD Society of Nuclear Medicine SP 1583 OP 1589 DO 10.2967/jnumed.117.204271 VO 59 IS 10 A1 Val J. Lowe A1 Emily S. Lundt A1 Matthew L. Senjem A1 Christopher G. Schwarz A1 Hoon-Ki Min A1 Scott A. Przybelski A1 Kejal Kantarci A1 David Knopman A1 Ronald C. Petersen A1 Clifford R. Jack, Jr. YR 2018 UL http://jnm.snmjournals.org/content/59/10/1583.abstract AB Amyloid-β (Aβ) deposition as seen on PET using an Aβ-binding agent is a critical diagnostic biomarker for Alzheimer disease (AD). Some reports suggest using white matter (WM) as a reference region for quantification of serial Aβ PET studies; however, nonspecific WM retention in Aβ PET in people with dementia or cognitively unimpaired (CU) has been widely reported and is poorly understood. Methods: To investigate the suitability of WM as a reference region and the factors affecting WM 11C-Pittsburgh compound B (11C-PiB) uptake variability, we conducted a retrospective study on 2 large datasets: a longitudinal study of participants (n = 577) who were CU, had mild cognitive impairment, or had dementia likely due to AD; and a cross-sectional study of single-scan PET imaging in CU subjects (n = 1,349). In the longitudinal study, annual changes in WM 11C-PiB uptake were assessed, and in the cross-sectional study, WM 11C-PiB uptake was assessed relative to subject age. Results: Overall, we found that WM 11C-PiB uptake showed age-related increases, which varied with the WM regions selected. Further, variable annual WM 11C-PiB uptake changes were seen with different gray matter (GM) 11C-PiB baseline uptake levels. Conclusion: WM binding increases with age and varies with GM 11C-PiB. These correlations should be considered when using WM for normalization in 11C-PiB PET studies. The cerebellar crus1+crus2 showed no increase with age and cerebellar GM+WM showed minimal increase, supporting their use as reference regions for cross-sectional studies comparing wide age spans. In longitudinal studies, the increase in WM uptake may be minimal in the short-term and thus using WM as a reference region in these studies seems reasonable. However, as participants age, the findings may be affected by changes in WM uptake. Changes in WM 11C-PiB uptake may relate to disease progression, warranting examination of the causes of WM 11C-PiB uptake.