| Literature DB >> 31380379 |
Roberta Assante1, Emilia Zampella1, Emanuele Nicolai2, Wanda Acampa1, Emilia Vergara1, Carmela Nappi1, Valeria Gaudieri1, Giovanni Fiumara2, Michele Klain1, Mario Petretta3, Alberto Cuocolo1.
Abstract
Background: We evaluated the incremental value of [99mTc]sestamibi single photon-emission computed tomography (SPECT)/computed tomography (CT) over planar imaging for localization of abnormal parathyroid tissue in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism.Entities:
Keywords: SPECT/CT; hyperparathyroidism; planar imaging; sestamibi; ultrasound
Year: 2019 PMID: 31380379 PMCID: PMC6646520 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2019.00164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Patient demographics and baseline characteristics.
| Mean age (years) | 57 ± 14 (24–80) |
| Women ( | 36 |
| Men ( | 10 |
| Nodular type ( | 18 |
| Inflammatory type | 4 |
| Residual thyroid tissue after total thyroidectomy | 2 |
| Median serum parathyroid hormone (pg/mL) | 91.5 (76.4–131.4) |
| Median serum calcium (mg/dL) | 10.9 (10.5–11.2) |
Normal ranges for parathyroid hormone and serum calcium are 10–65 pg/mL and 8.4–10.5 mg/dL, respectively.
Data are mean ± standard deviation; data in parentheses are range.
Data in parentheses are interquartile range.
Figure 1Diagnostic agreement between planar and SPECT/CT imaging, in the overall population. CI, confidence interval.
Figure 2Images in a 63-year-old woman with primary hyperparathyroidism. (A) Dual-phase planar parathyroid images show diffuse sestamibi uptake in the thyroid gland, but no focal tracer uptake on early acquisition and uniform washout on delayed acquisition. (B) Axial, sagittal and coronal delayed-phase sestamibi SPECT/CT images show focal sestamibi uptake localizing to a single abnormal left upper parathyroid gland. The patient underwent minimally invasive parathyroidectomy for a single left upper parathyroid adenoma and experienced an appropriate drop in intraoperative parathyroid hormone.
Figure 3Diagnostic agreement between planar and SPECT/CT imaging, in patients with concomitant thyroid disease. CI, confidence interval.
Figure 4Decision tree analysis for the classification of patients as positive or negative based on planar and SPECT/CT results. The split produced three terminal groups. The initial split was on planar imaging results. In patients with positive results no further split was performed, while those with negative results were further stratified by SPECT/CT. For each split, the p value testing the null hypothesis of independence between the input variables and the response is depicted.
Figure 5Decision curves analysis using a model including planar imaging and a model including SPECT/CT. The red line is the net benefit of treating no patients, assuming that none had hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue; the navy line is the net benefit of treating all patients assuming that all had hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue; the green line is the net benefit of treating patients according to the model including planar imaging; and the orange line is the net benefit of treating patients based on the model with SPECT/CT.