Recent applications of positron emission tomographic (PET) imaging in psychiatric drug discovery

Expert Opin Drug Discov. 2024 Feb;19(2):161-172. doi: 10.1080/17460441.2023.2278635. Epub 2024 Feb 1.

Abstract

Introduction: Psychiatry is one of the medical disciplines that suffers most from a lack of innovation in its therapeutic arsenal. Many failures in drug candidate trials can be explained by pharmacological properties that have been poorly assessed upstream, in terms of brain passage, brain target binding and clinical outcomes. Positron emission tomography can provide pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic data to help select candidate-molecules for further clinical trials.

Areas covered: This review aims to explain and discuss the various methods using positron-emitting radiolabeled molecules to trace the cerebral distribution of the drug-candidate or indirectly measure binding to its therapeutic target. More than an exhaustive review of PET studies in psychopharmacology, this article highlights the contributions this technology can make in drug discovery applied to psychiatry.

Expert opinion: PET neuroimaging is the only technological approach that can, in vivo in humans, measure cerebral delivery of a drug candidate, percentage and duration of target binding, and even the pharmacological effects. PET studies in a small number of subjects in the early stages of the development of a psychotropic drug can therefore provide the pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic data required for subsequent clinical evaluation. While PET technology is demanding in terms of radiochemical, radiopharmacological and nuclear medicine expertise, its integration into the development process of new drugs for psychiatry has great added value.

Keywords: Drug discovery; PET microdosing; drug occupancy; neuroimaging; neuropsychopharmacology; positron emission tomography; psychiatry; radiopharmaceutical.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Brain / metabolism
  • Drug Discovery / methods
  • Electrons*
  • Humans
  • Pharmaceutical Preparations / metabolism
  • Positron-Emission Tomography* / methods
  • Psychotropic Drugs / pharmacology

Substances

  • Pharmaceutical Preparations
  • Psychotropic Drugs