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Nuclear medicine practice in Japan: a report of the eighth nationwide survey in 2017

Authors :
Yoshihiro Nishiyama
Seigo Kinuya
Takashi Kato
Daiki Kayano
Shuhei Sato
Manabu Tashiro
Mitsuaki Tatsumi
Teisuke Hashimoto
Shingo Baba
Kenji Hirata
Mana Yoshimura
Hiroto Yoneyama
Source :
Annals of nuclear medicine. 33(10)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Subcommittee on Survey of Nuclear Medicine Practice in Japan has performed a nationwide survey of nuclear medicine practice every 5 years since 1982 to survey contemporary nuclear medicine practice and its changes over the years.The subcommittee sent questionnaires, including the number and category of examinations as well as the kind and dose of the radiopharmaceuticals during the 30 days of June 2017, to all nuclear medicine institutes. The total numbers for the year 2017 were then estimated.A total of 1132 institutes responded to the survey, including 351 PET centers. The recovery rate was 90.6%. The number of gamma cameras installed was 1332 in total, with 7.0% decrease in 5 years. Dual-head cameras and hybrid SPECT/CT scanners accounted for 88.2 and 23.6%, respectively. The number of single-photon tracer studies in 2017 was 1.08 million which means a decrease in 5.7% in 5 years and 23.6% in 10 years. All but neurotransmitter system, sentinel lymph node, and liver scintigraphy decreased. Bone scintigraphy was a leading examination (32.3%), followed by myocardial scintigraphy (24.1%) and cerebral perfusion study (18.0%) in order. SPECT studies showed an increase from 47.2% to 63.5%. PET centers have also increased from 295 to 389, as compared to the last survey. The 112 PET centers have installed one or two in-house cyclotrons. PET studies showed 24.5% increase in 5 years, with oncology accounting for 88.9%.Single-photon examinations showed a continuous tendency toward a decline in the survey. In contrast, the number of hybrid SPECT/CT scanner examinations has increased. PET/CT study and radionuclide targeted therapy have steadily increased.

Details

ISSN :
18646433
Volume :
33
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of nuclear medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2f17757b5fa62128f8a93d2d8f1b9356