학술논문

Microglia imaging in methamphetamine use disorder: a positron emission tomography study with the 18 kDa translocator protein radioligand [F-18]FEPPA.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Addiction Biology. Jan2021, Vol. 26 Issue 1, p1-8. 8p.
Subject
*POSITRON emission tomography
*TRANSLOCATOR proteins
*METHAMPHETAMINE
*MICROGLIA
*SELF-evaluation
*THIRST
*PYRIDINE
*RESEARCH
*SUBSTANCE abuse
*RESEARCH methodology
*CELL receptors
*MAGNETIC resonance imaging
*RADIOISOTOPES
*CASE-control method
*MEDICAL cooperation
*EVALUATION research
*FLUORINE isotopes
*COMPARATIVE studies
*CELLS
*RADIOPHARMACEUTICALS
*RESEARCH funding
*AMIDES
BRAIN metabolism
Language
ISSN
1355-6215
Abstract
Activation of brain microglial cells, microgliosis, has been linked to methamphetamine (MA)-seeking behavior, suggesting that microglia could be a new therapeutic target for MA use disorder. Animal data show marked brain microglial activation following acute high-dose MA, but microglial status in human MA users is uncertain, with one positron emission tomography (PET) investigation reporting massively and globally increased translocator protein 18 kDa (TSPO; [C-11](R)-PK11195) binding, a biomarker for microgliosis, in MA users. Our aim was to measure binding of a second-generation TSPO radioligand, [F-18]FEPPA, in brain of human chronic MA users. Regional total volume of distribution (VT ) of [F-18]FEPPA was estimated with a two-tissue compartment model with arterial plasma input function for 10 regions of interest in 11 actively using MA users and 26 controls. A RM-ANOVA corrected for TSPO rs6971 polymorphism was employed to test significance. There was no main effect of group on [F-18]FEPPA VT (P = .81). No significant correlations between [F-18]FEPPA VT and MA use duration, weekly dosage, blood MA concentrations, regional brain volumes, and self-reported craving were observed. Our preliminary findings, consistent with our earlier postmortem data, do not suggest substantial brain microgliosis in MA use disorder but do not rule out microglia as a therapeutic target in MA addiction. Absence of increased [F-18]FEPPA TSPO binding might be related to insufficient MA dose or blunting of microglial response following repeated MA exposure, as suggested by some animal data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]