Ali Modabber1, Daniel Schick2, Stephan C Möhlhenrich3, Felix M Mottaghy4, Frederik A Verburg5, Frank Hölzle3, Marcus Gerressen6. 1. Department of Oral, Maxillofacial and Plastic Facial Surgery, School of Medicine, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany. Electronic address: amodabber@ukaachen.de. 2. Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Medical Faculty, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany. 3. Department of Oral, Maxillofacial and Plastic Facial Surgery, School of Medicine, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany. 4. Department of Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany. 5. Department of Nuclear Medicine, Philipps-University Marburg, Marburg, Germany. 6. Department of Oral, Maxillofacial and Plastic Facial Surgery, Heinrich-Braun Hospital Zwickau, Germany.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Since accurate diagnosis of inflammatory jaw diseases is still challenging, this study investigated the performance of three phase bone scintigraphy including SPECT/CT in the assessment of correct diagnosis and size of the affected bone tissue. METHOD: This retrospective study contained 31 patients with suspected jaw-related osteoradionecrosis, osteomyelitis or medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw, which underwent 3-phase bone scintigraphy including SPECT/CT. Results were reviewed by two nuclear medicine physicians. Positive cases received surgery; negative ones were followed-up for six months. Both served as reference standard. Inflamed bone length was measured in the SPECT/CT images and postoperatively by a pathologist. RESULTS: 19 out of 20 positive cases and 10 out of 11 negative ones were classified correctly by SPECT/CT (sensitivity 95 %, specificity 91 %, accuracy 94 %, positive predictive value 95 %, negative predictive value 91 %). Regarding the length of affected bone, no significant difference (p = 0.23) could be observed between SPECT/CT and postoperative obtained values. Both correlated significantly (r = 0.86, p = 0.0001). CONCLUSION: SPECT/CT can safely detect different kinds of inflammatory jaw pathologies compared to other conventional imaging modalities. Lack of specificity of conventional scintigraphy ranging from 17 % to 71 % in earlier studies could be improved by adding CT-analysis. Additionally, SPECT/CT assists the surgeon in determining the expansion of the process (with focus on the length) preoperatively and thereby optimizing surgery planning.
PURPOSE: Since accurate diagnosis of inflammatory jaw diseases is still challenging, this study investigated the performance of three phase bone scintigraphy including SPECT/CT in the assessment of correct diagnosis and size of the affected bone tissue. METHOD: This retrospective study contained 31 patients with suspected jaw-related osteoradionecrosis, osteomyelitis or medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw, which underwent 3-phase bone scintigraphy including SPECT/CT. Results were reviewed by two nuclear medicine physicians. Positive cases received surgery; negative ones were followed-up for six months. Both served as reference standard. Inflamed bone length was measured in the SPECT/CT images and postoperatively by a pathologist. RESULTS: 19 out of 20 positive cases and 10 out of 11 negative ones were classified correctly by SPECT/CT (sensitivity 95 %, specificity 91 %, accuracy 94 %, positive predictive value 95 %, negative predictive value 91 %). Regarding the length of affected bone, no significant difference (p = 0.23) could be observed between SPECT/CT and postoperative obtained values. Both correlated significantly (r = 0.86, p = 0.0001). CONCLUSION: SPECT/CT can safely detect different kinds of inflammatory jaw pathologies compared to other conventional imaging modalities. Lack of specificity of conventional scintigraphy ranging from 17 % to 71 % in earlier studies could be improved by adding CT-analysis. Additionally, SPECT/CT assists the surgeon in determining the expansion of the process (with focus on the length) preoperatively and thereby optimizing surgery planning.