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Amyloid-Related Imaging Abnormalities (ARIA)
Amyloid-Related Imaging Abnormalities (ARIA)
<div class="infobox infobox-disease">
<div class="infobox-header">Amyloid-Related Imaging Abnormalities (ARIA)</div>
<div class="infobox-row">
<div class="infobox-label">Context</div>
<div class="infobox-value">MRI abnormalities associated with anti-amyloid therapy and cerebral amyloid angiopathy-related vascular fragility</div>
</div>
<div class="infobox-row">
<div class="infobox-label">Main subtypes</div>
<div class="infobox-value">ARIA-E (edema/effusion) and ARIA-H (microhemorrhage/siderosis)</div>
</div>
<div class="infobox-row">
<div class="infobox-label">Major risk factors</div>
<div class="infobox-value">APOE ε4 carriage, higher antibody dose, baseline microhemorrhages, vascular amyloid burden</div>
</div>
</div>
Overview
Amyloid-related imaging abnormalities (ARIA) are MRI findings that emerged as a major safety issue in anti-amyloid monoclonal antibody trials for [Alzheimer's disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease).[@antibodybased][@amyloidrelated] ARIA is usually divided into ARIA-E, which reflects vasogenic edema or sulcal effusions, and ARIA-H, which includes microhemorrhages and superficial siderosis.[@antibodybased][@regulatory]
Types
ARIA-E
...
Amyloid-Related Imaging Abnormalities (ARIA)
<div class="infobox infobox-disease">
<div class="infobox-header">Amyloid-Related Imaging Abnormalities (ARIA)</div>
<div class="infobox-row">
<div class="infobox-label">Context</div>
<div class="infobox-value">MRI abnormalities associated with anti-amyloid therapy and cerebral amyloid angiopathy-related vascular fragility</div>
</div>
<div class="infobox-row">
<div class="infobox-label">Main subtypes</div>
<div class="infobox-value">ARIA-E (edema/effusion) and ARIA-H (microhemorrhage/siderosis)</div>
</div>
<div class="infobox-row">
<div class="infobox-label">Major risk factors</div>
<div class="infobox-value">APOE ε4 carriage, higher antibody dose, baseline microhemorrhages, vascular amyloid burden</div>
</div>
</div>
Overview
Amyloid-related imaging abnormalities (ARIA) are MRI findings that emerged as a major safety issue in anti-amyloid monoclonal antibody trials for [Alzheimer's disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease).[@antibodybased][@amyloidrelated] ARIA is usually divided into ARIA-E, which reflects vasogenic edema or sulcal effusions, and ARIA-H, which includes microhemorrhages and superficial siderosis.[@antibodybased][@regulatory]
Types
ARIA-E
ARIA-E appears as parenchymal edema or sulcal effusion on MRI and is the subtype most strongly associated with symptomatic presentations such as headache, confusion, visual symptoms, or focal neurologic complaints.[@antibodybased][@amyloidrelated] The edema is typically vasogenic in nature, reflecting increased vascular permeability rather than true inflammatory changes.
Imaging characteristics include:
- Hyperintense signal on FLAIR sequences
- Typically cortical or subcortical in location
- Often in posterior brain regions
- May be accompanied by sulcal effusions[@antibodybased][@regulatory]
ARIA-H
ARIA-H refers to hemosiderin-related findings including microhemorrhages and superficial siderosis. It is often asymptomatic but clinically important because it reflects vascular fragility and may alter risk-benefit decisions for continued anti-amyloid treatment.[@antibodybased][@regulatory]
Imaging features include:
- Small hypointense foci on T2* GRE or SWI sequences
- Superficial siderosis presenting as hemosiderin deposition along leptomeningeal surfaces
- Often distributed in lobar regions (cortical)[@regulatory][@trem]
Why ARIA Happens
The leading model is that vascular amyloid burden, vessel-wall injury, and therapy-driven amyloid mobilization interact to increase vascular permeability and hemorrhagic risk.[@antibodybased][@amyloidrelated][@trem] This is why ARIA is often discussed along a continuum with [cerebral amyloid angiopathy](/diseases/cerebral-amyloid-angiopathy).[@trem]
Proposed mechanisms include:
Risk Factors
- [APOE](/proteins/apoe) ε4 carriage, especially homozygosity (2-3x elevated risk)[@antibodybased][@amyloidrelated]
- Higher anti-amyloid dose exposure[@amyloidrelated][@regulatory]
- Baseline microhemorrhages or other vascular amyloid markers[@antibodybased]
- Early treatment phase, when most ARIA events are first detected (first 3-6 months)[@antibodybased][@regulatory]
- Female sex (observed in some studies)
- Prior cerebral hemorrhage history[@trem]
Clinical Management
Detection and Monitoring
Most cases are detected on protocol MRI rather than by symptoms.[@antibodybased][@regulatory] Standard monitoring includes:
- Baseline MRI before initiating treatment
- Periodic MRI scans (typically at weeks 4, 8, 12, then quarterly)
- Symptom-driven imaging if neurological changes occur[@antibodybased]
Treatment Approach
Management typically follows a severity-based protocol:
- Mild/moderate ARIA-E: Dose interruption, close monitoring, repeat MRI
- Severe ARIA-E: Discontinue treatment, consider corticosteroids
- ARIA-H: Risk-benefit assessment, may require treatment discontinuation[@antibodybased][@trem]
Corticosteroids (e.g., dexamethasone, methylprednisolone) are sometimes used in symptomatic cases to reduce edema and inflammation.[@trem]
Symptomatic Management
Patients presenting with symptoms may require:
- Neurological evaluation
- Supportive care
- Management of complications (seizures, edema)
- Multidisciplinary input (neurology, radiology, geriatrics)[@antibodybased]
Implications for Anti-Amyloid Therapies
ARIA represents one of the central constraints on anti-amyloid treatment deployment:
Lecanemab (Leqembi)
- ARIA-E incidence: ~10% (placebo ~1%)
- ARIA-H incidence: ~17% (placebo ~8%)
- Higher risk in APOE ε4 carriers[@relationship]
Donanemab (Kisunla)
- Similar ARIA profile to [lecanemab](/entities/lecanemab)
- ARIA more common in first 6 months
- Risk mitigation through APOE testing and MRI monitoring[^6]
Aducanumab (Aduhelm)
- Higher doses associated with more ARIA
- Led to label restrictions and withdrawal from market[@amyloidrelated]
Relevance to the Wiki
ARIA matters across pages about [lecanemab](/therapeutics/lecanemab), [donanemab](/therapeutics/donanemab), [aducanumab](/therapeutics/aducanumab), and broader [amyloid immunotherapy vaccines for Alzheimer's disease](/therapeutics/amyloid-vaccines), because it is one of the central constraints on anti-amyloid treatment deployment.
See Also
- [Amyloid Immunotherapy Vaccines for Alzheimer's Disease](/therapeutics/amyloid-vaccines)
- [Aducanumab (Aduhelm)](/therapeutics/aducanumab)
- [Lecanemab (Leqembi)](/therapeutics/lecanemab)
- [Donanemab (Kisunla)](/therapeutics/donanemab)
- [Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy (CAA)](/diseases/cerebral-amyloid-angiopathy)
- [Alzheimer's Disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease)
External Links
- [Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/)
- [NCBI Resources](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/)
Recent Research (2024-2026)
This section highlights recent publications relevant to this disease.
- [Antibody-based nanoparticles in Alzheimer's disease: Innovations in diagnosis and therapy.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41762606/) (2026 May) - Pathology, research and practice
- [Amyloid-related imaging abnormalities (ARIA) in Alzheimer's immunotherapy: a framework and challenges for global surveillance strategies.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41571449/) (2026 Mar 13) - Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry
- [Regulatory, clinical, and post-marketing challenges of lecanemab for Alzheimer's disease: insights from real-world data.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41787137/) (2026 Mar 6) - Neurological sciences : official journal of the Italian Neurological Society and of the Italian Society of Clinical Neurophysiology
- [The TREM2 agonistic antibody AL002 in early Alzheimer's disease: a phase 2 randomized trial.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41787076/) (2026 Mar 5) - Nature medicine
- [Relationship between APOE Genotype Status and Imaging Features in Patients with Alzheimer Disease Being Considered for Antiamyloid β Therapy.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41781178/) (2026 Mar 4) - AJNR. American journal of neuroradiology
References
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