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Improved reproducibility of simple quantitative indices from ⁹⁹mTc-GSA liver functional imaging

Authors :
Gou, Ogasawara
Yusuke, Inoue
Yoshihiro, Itoh
Satomi, Tagami
Keiji, Matsunaga
Kenji, Miki
Source :
Annals of Nuclear Medicine
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Objective We evaluated intra- and interoperator reproducibilities in calculating the conventional indices HH15 and LHL15 from 99mTc-diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid galactosyl human serum albumin (99mTc-GSA) scintigraphy, and proposed new, simple methods for the calculation of quantitative indices. Methods The results of 99mTc-GSA scintigraphy in 33 patients were retrospectively analyzed. Heart and liver ROIs were drawn manually to cover cardiac blood pool and entire liver, respectively, and HH15 and LHL15 were calculated. In addition, square regions of interest (ROIs) of fixed sizes were placed at the highest activity in blood pool and the liver. Using the square heart ROI, sHH15, an equivalent of HH15, was computed. Fractional liver uptake at 15 min (FLU15) was calculated using the square heart and liver ROIs. Intra- and interoperator reproducibilities, as well as correlation with Indocyanine green retention rate at 15 min (ICG R15), were assessed for these four indices by linear regression analysis. Results Substantial intra- and interoperator variabilities were found for HH15 and LHL15. The correlation coefficients for intra- and interoperator comparisons were 0.884 and 0.869 for HH15, respectively, and 0.919 and 0.917 for LHL15, respectively. The use of square ROIs instead of hand-drawn ROIs improved reproducibility. The correlation coefficients for intra- and interoperator comparisons were 0.988 and 0.973 for sHH15, respectively, and 0.989 and 0.975 for FLU15, respectively. Correlation with ICG R15 was better for sHH15 (r = 0.619) and FLU15 (r = −0.656) than for HH15 (r = 0.439) and LHL15 (r = −0.490). Conclusions HH15 and LHL15 showed substantial intra- and interoperator variabilities, and the use of square ROIs are indicated to provide better reproducibility.

Details

ISSN :
18646433
Volume :
27
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of nuclear medicine
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........4a555b3ee7f7c1906652d7ecf763087a