First experiences with dynamic renal [68Ga]Ga-DOTA PET/CT: a comparison to renal scintigraphy and compartmental modelling to non-invasively estimate the glomerular filtration rate

Author:

Kersting DavidORCID,Sraieb Miriam,Seifert Robert,Costa Pedro Fragoso,Kazek Sandra,Kessler Lukas,Umutlu Lale,Fendler Wolfgang Peter,Jentzen Walter,Herrmann Ken,Büther Florian,Nader Michael,Rischpler Christoph

Abstract

Abstract Purpose The determination of the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is decisive for a variety of clinical issues, for example, to monitor the renal function in radionuclide therapy patients. Renal scintigraphy using glomerularly filtered tracers allows combined acquisition of renograms and GFR estimation but requires repeated blood sampling for several hours. In contrast, dynamic PET imaging using the glomerularly filtered tracer [68Ga]Ga-DOTA bears the potential to non-invasively estimate the GFR by compartmental kinetic modelling. Here, we report the, to our knowledge, first comparison of human renal dynamic [68Ga]Ga-DOTA PET imaging in comparison to renal scintigraphy and compare PET-derived to serum creatinine-derived GFR measurements. Methods Dynamic [68Ga]Ga-DOTA PET data were acquired for 30 min immediately after tracer injection in 12 patients. PET and renal scintigraphy images were visually interpreted in a consensus read by three nuclear medicine physicians. The functional renal cortex was segmented to obtain time-activity curves. The arterial input function was estimated from the PET signal in the abdominal aorta. Single-compartmental tracer kinetic modelling was performed to calculate the GFR using complete 30-min (GFRPET-30) and reduced 15-min PET data sets (GFRPET-15) to evaluate whether a shorter acquisition time is sufficient for an accurate GFR estimation. A modified approach excluding minutes 2 to 10 was applied to reduce urinary spill-over effects. Serum creatinine-derived GFRCKD (CKD-EPI-formula) was used as reference standard. Results PET image interpretation revealed the same findings as conventional scintigraphy (2/12 patients with both- and 1/12 patients with right-sided urinary obstruction). Model fit functions were substantially improved for the modified approach to exclude spill-over. Depending on the modelling approach, GFRCKD and both GFRPET-30 and GFRPET-15 were well correlated with interclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) from 0.74 to 0.80 and Pearson’s correlation coefficients (PCCs) from 0.74 to 0.81. For a subgroup of patients with undisturbed urinary efflux (n = 9), correlations were good to excellent (ICCs from 0.82 to 0.95 and PCCs from 0.83 to 0.95). Overall, GFRPET-30 and GFRPET-15 were excellently correlated (ICCs from 0.96 to 0.99 and PCCs from 0.96 to 0.99). Conclusion Renal [68Ga]Ga-DOTA PET can be a suitable alternative to conventional scintigraphy. Visual assessment of PET images and conventional renograms revealed comparable results. GFR values derived by non-invasive single-compartmental-modelling of PET data show a good correlation to serum creatinine-derived GFR values. In patients with undisturbed urinary efflux, the correlation was excellent. Dynamic PET data acquisition for 15 min is sufficient for visual evaluation and GFR derivation.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Universitätsklinikum Essen

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine

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1. Role of Functional SPECT and PET in Renal Emergencies;Seminars in Nuclear Medicine;2023-11

2. The importance of sampling time in radionuclide measurement of glomerular filtration rate in adults using single blood sample;Clinical and Translational Imaging;2023-08-07

3. Quantitative assessment of renal functions using 68Ga-EDTA dynamic PET imaging in renal injury in mice of different origins;Frontiers in Medicine;2023-03-27

4. Response to letter to the editor;European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging;2022-07-09

5. Letter to the editor;European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging;2022-05-28

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