Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT03324646 |
Other study ID # |
170179 |
Secondary ID |
17-M-0179 |
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
October 3, 2017 |
Est. completion date |
January 30, 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
March 18, 2024 |
Source |
National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC) |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Background:
A radioligand is a radioactive substance that is used to diagnose diseases. A new ligand is
called [11C]PS13. This has a small amount of radioactivity that can be detected by a positron
emission tomography (PET) scan. If this ligand works well in this study, researchers may be
able to use it to better understand and diagnose brain disorders.
Objectives:
To evaluate if [11C]PS13 can measure its receptor, which is involved in inflammation. To see
if researchers get the same results when scanning a person twice.
Eligibility:
Healthy people ages 18 and older who are in Protocol 01-M-0254.
Design:
This study requires three visits of 2-5 hours each.
Participants will have 2 PET scans with [11C]PS13.
A needle will guide a small plastic tube (catheter) into an arm vein. The needle will be
removed, leaving only the catheter in the vein. The ligand will be injected through the
catheter.
The PET scanner is shaped like a doughnut. Participants will lie on a bed that slides in and
out of the scanner.
Participants will wear a molded a plastic mask that fits the head.
Another catheter will be put into an artery at the wrist or elbow area.
Vital signs will be monitored during the PET scan. Participants will have a test during the
PET scan to monitor heart function.
Participants will have blood and urine tests.
Participants will have 1 magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan. The MRI scanner is a metal
cylinder surrounded by a strong magnetic field. Participants will lie on a table that slides
in and out of the cylinder.
Description:
Objective
The cyclooxygenase (COX) system is implicated in the pathophysiology of brain diseases,
including Alzheimer s disease and depression, and is a potential biomarker for
neuroinflammation. COX is the rate-limiting enzyme in the synthesis of prostaglandins from
arachidonic acid and exists as two primary isoforms COX-1 and COX-2. Our laboratory recently
developed [(11)C]PS13, a novel PET ligand to selectively image COX-1, and initial PET scans
in monkey demonstrated that [11C]PS13 is a promising ligand.
This study has two primary objectives. First, we will determine whether the uptake of
[(11)C]PS13 in brain and periphery reflects the distribution of COX-1, as demonstrated by
blocking with a COX-1 preferential drug (aspirin or ketoprofen) and/or no effect with a COX-2
selective drug (celecoxib). Second, we will measure the test/retest reproducibility of brain
uptake quantified by compartmental modeling and using arterial and/or venous blood samples.
Study Population
Healthy adult volunteers (aged 18 years or older) will have either whole body imaging (n =
41) or brain imaging (n = 20).
Design
Phase 1: We will begin with whole body scanning in a single human subject using up to 10 mCi.
The aim of this first scan will be to detect a tracer that disproportionately accumulates in
a single radiosensitive organ, such as the gonads. If we confirm that radioactivity is fairly
widely distributed in the body, higher activities may be injected.
Phase 2:Thirty healthy subjects will have three whole body imaging PET scans using 20 mCi of
[11C]PS13. Scan 1 will serve as the baseline scan for comparison to enzyme occupancy studies
and will provide dosimetry information. Scan 2 will be an enzyme occupancy study using the
COX-2 selective antagonist celecoxib. Scan 3 will be an enzyme occupancy study using the
COX-1 preferential antagonist aspirin. Ten healthy subjects will have two whole body imaging
PET scans using 20 mCi of [11C]PS13. Scan
1 will serve as the baseline scan, and scan 2 will be an enzyme occupancy study using another
potent COX-1 antagonist ketoprofen.
Phase 3: We will perform 15 test retest kinetic brain imaging PET studies with arterial
and/or venous blood sampling and 5 test retest brain PET studies with both arterial and
venous blood sampling, using a 20 mCi dose of [(11)C]PS13.
Outcome Measures
For whole body imaging, organ uptake will be quantified as a Standardized Uptake Value (SUV),
which normalizes for injected activity and body weight. Blockade by aspirin, ketoprofen, and
celecoxib will be expressed as a percentage of the baseline scan in each subject and plotted
relative to the plasma concentration of the drug at time of the PET scan. For dedicated brain
imaging, uptake will be quantified as distribution volume (VT) calculated with compartmental
modeling and serial concentrations of parent radioligand in arterial and/or
venous plasma.