Ultrafast cadmium-zinc-telluride-based renal single-photon emission computed tomography: clinical validation

Author:

Dietz MatthieuORCID,Jacquet-Francillon NicolasORCID,Bani Sadr AlexandreORCID,Collette BorisORCID,Mure Pierre-YvesORCID,Demède Delphine,Pina-Jomir Géraldine,Moreau-Triby Caroline,Grégoire BastienORCID,Mouriquand Pierre,Janier MarcORCID,Flaus AnthimeORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background One of the main limitations of 99mtechnetium-dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scan is the long acquisition time. Objective To evaluate the feasibility of short DMSA scan acquisition times using a cadmium-zinc-telluride-based single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) system in children. Materials and methods The data of 27 children (median age: 4 years; 16 girls) who underwent DMSA SPECT were retrospectively analyzed. Both planar and SPECT DMSA were performed. SPECT images were analyzed using coronal-simulated planar two-dimensional images. A reduction in SPECT acquisition time was simulated to provide 4 series (SPECT-15 min, SPECT-10 min, SPECT-5 min and SPECT-2.5 min). A direct comparison of the planar and SPECT series was performed, including semi-quantification reproducibility, image quality (mean quality score on a scale of 0 to 2) and inter- and intra-observer reproducibility of the scintigraphic patterns. Results The overall image quality score (± standard deviation) was 1.3 (± 0.6) for the planar data set, 1.6 (± 0.5) for the SPECT-15 min data set, 1.4 (± 0.5) for the SPECT-10 min data set, 1.0 (± 0.5) for the SPECT-5 min data set and 0.6 (± 0.6) for the SPECT-2.5 min data set. Median Kappa coefficients for inter-observer agreement between planar and SPECT images were greater than 0.83 for all series and all readers except one reader for the SPECT-2.5 min series (median Kappa coefficient = 0.77). Conclusion Shortening SPECT acquisitions to 5 min is feasible with minimal impact on images in terms of quality and reproducibility. Graphical Abstract

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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