| Literature DB >> 29728144 |
Mariana Reza1,2, Reza Kaboteh3, May Sadik3, Anders Bjartell2,4, Per Wollmer1,2, Elin Trägårdh5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Bone Scan Index (BSI) is used to quantitatively assess the total tumour burden in bone scans of patients with metastatic prostate cancer. The clinical utility of BSI has recently been validated as a prognostic imaging biomarker. However, the clinical utility of the on-treatment change in BSI is dependent on the reproducibility of bone scans. The objective of this prospective study is to evaluate the intra-patient reproducibility of two bone scan procedures performed at a one-week interval.Entities:
Keywords: Bone metastasis; Bone scan index; Bone scan quantitative analysis; Prostate cancer; Reproducibility
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29728144 PMCID: PMC5935944 DOI: 10.1186/s12880-018-0257-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Imaging ISSN: 1471-2342 Impact factor: 1.930
Basic characteristics of patients and scans
| Age, year, median (range) | 76 (70–86) |
|---|---|
| Time between bone scans, days, median (range) | 6 (1–9) |
| 1st Bone Scan: Time from injection to image acquisition, min (SD) | 210 (25) |
| 2nd Bone Scan: Time from injection to image acquisition, min (SD) | 201 (30) |
Median and range for BSI measurements from the first and the second bone scans
| All patients ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| First BSI | Second BSI | BSI difference | p |
| 0.66 (0–40.77) | 0.63 (0–22.98) | −0.005 (−17.99–0) | 0.41 (NS) |
| Patients with BSI ≤10 (n = 17) | |||
| First BSI | Second BSI | BSI difference | p |
| 0.24 (0–5.41) | 0.14 (0–5.28) | −0.1 (−2.2–0) | 0.11 (NS) |
BSI Bone Scan Index, NS Not significant
Fig. 1Scatter plot (left) and Bland Altman plot (right) for the whole cohort (n = 20). The regression line is solid, and the identity line is dotted in the left figure. In the right figure, the solid line represents the median
Fig. 2A patient with a small difference in BSI at two different examinations performed 6 days apart. The upper row shows the bone scan (anterior and posterior views) after the first (left) and second (right) examinations. The lower row shows the hotspots automatically detected by the EXINI software. Blue lesions are not considered metastatic (and thus not included in the BSI measurement), and red lesions are considered metastatic
Fig. 3A patient with a large difference in BSI at two different examinations performed 6 days apart. The upper row shows the bone scan (anterior and posterior views) after the first (left) and second (right) examination. The lower row shows the hotspots automatically detected by the EXINI software. Blue lesions are not considered metastatic (and thus not included in the BSI measurement), and the red lesions are considered metastatic
Fig. 4The patient with the largest difference in BSI at the two different bone scans. The figure shows anterior views after the first and second examination (left images). The right images show the hotspots automatically detected by the EXINI software. Blue lesions are not considered metastatic (and thus not included in the BSI measurement), and the red lesions are considered metastatic
Fig. 5Scatter plot (left) and Bland Altman plot (right) for patients with BSI < 10 (n = 17). The regression line is solid, and the identity line is dotted in the left figure. In the right figure, the solid line represents the median