Affiliation:
1. Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Hyogo Prefectural Amagasaki General Medical Center, Hyogo
2. Department of Radiology, Kindai University Faculty of Medicine, Osaka
3. Division of Medical Information Technology and Administration Planning, Kyoto University Hospital, Kyoto, Japan.
Abstract
Purpose
The possibility of steroid administration inducing the extensive skeletal muscle uptake (ESMU) of FDG in PET scans was investigated.
Methods
From 8923 consecutive 18F-FDG PET/CT scans taken at our hospital, 23 scans (15 patients) met adult age and ESMU-positive inclusion criteria. Among the 15 patients, 13 with both ESMU-positive and -negative scans were examined for association with steroid administration.
Results
Extensive skeletal muscle uptake was associated with a history of steroid administration (χ
2 test: P = 0.001). Notably, 20 ESMU-positive scans and 11 ESMU-negative scans were significantly different, with 0 to 95 days (median, 18.5 days) and 0 to 708 days (median, 319.0 days) since the last steroid administration, respectively (Mann-Whitney U test, P = 0.003). A significant correlation was observed between mean skeletal muscle SUVmax and the number of days since the last steroid administration (Spearman rank correlation coefficient, ρ = −0.501, P = 0.004). Specifically, the degree of ESMU tended to decrease over time, after steroid administration. From multiple regression analysis, the number of days since the last steroid administration was significantly associated with mean SUVmax (P = 0.007), but the blood glucose level was not significant (P = 0.204), revealing that the number of days since the last steroid administration was an independent risk factor. Multicollinearity was low (the variance inflation factor was 1.007 for both the number of days since the last steroid administration and blood glucose levels).
Conclusions
Steroid administration within months before PET may be one cause of ESMU.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine