A relatively new tau PET imaging agent identifies significantly more individuals with tau pathology across the Alzheimer's disease spectrum than F-18 flortaucipir, the FDA-approved agent, according to a study published May 30 in The Lancet.
The findings have "direct implications for patient stratification in clinical trials and more precise guidance for therapeutic decision-making," wrote a team led by Guilherme Povala, PhD, of the University of Pittsburgh.
"Compared with F-18 flortaucipir, [the investigational tracer F-18 MK6240] identified more individuals with tau pathology in [those both] cognitively unimpaired and cognitively impaired," the group explained.
Tau PET imaging provides a key biomarker for Alzheimer's disease, informing diagnosis, staging, and therapeutic selection, the investigators noted, writing that "tau PET tracer selection influences the frequency of detection of tau pathology across the ageing and Alzheimer's disease spectrum."
Povala and colleagues conducted a study that compared performance of F-18 flortaucipir to that of F-18 MK6240, an agent that "potentially exhibits higher sensitivity for neurofibrillary tangles and superior signal-to-noise ratio." The research included 682 patients recruited from eight north American sites who underwent PET, amyloid-β (Aβ) PET, and cognitive assessments between March 2022 and August 2025. The team tracked each tracer's accuracy for identifying Alzheimer's disease-related cognitive impairment and incidence of tau positivity in early medial temporal lobe (MTL) and late neocortical regions of participants' brains. Most patients identified as white (93%) and most were between the ages of 65 and 89 (63%).
Overall, the investigators reported that F-18 MK6240 was more accurate than F-18 flortaucipir for distinguishing Alzheimer's disease from non-Alzheimer's disease impairment, with an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.93 compared to 0.86, respectively (p
They also found the following:
Compared with F-18 flortaucipir, F-18 MK6240 identified "twice as many cognitively unimpaired Aβ-positive individuals with early medial temporal tau accumulation and more cognitively impaired Aβ-positive participants with neocortical tau involvement" -- flagging positivity at lower Aβ burden and detecting tau pathology earlier in the disease continuum, Povala and colleagues wrote.
"These results suggest that current estimates of tau PET positivity might be substantially underestimated, potentially delaying recognition of tau pathology and limiting access to disease-modifying therapies informed by tau PET," they concluded. "Tracer selection should be considered a critical determinant in Alzheimer’s disease care pathways, regulatory frameworks, and global efforts to advance early detection, equitable access, and precision medicine in neurodegenerative disease."
Click here to access the full study.
Whether you are a professional looking for a new job or a representative of an organization who needs workforce solutions - we are here to help.