| Literature DB >> 35401270 |
John F Thornton1,2, Howard Schneider2,3, Philip F Cohen2,4,5, Simon DeBruin6, John Michael Uszler2,7,8, Yin-Hui Siow2,9, Mary K McLean2,10, Muriel J van Lierop2,10, Dan G Pavel2,11, Theodore A Henderson2,12,13,14.
Abstract
In the community, there is a need to more objectively evaluate the response of common chronic psychiatric disorders to treatment. Brain single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) indirectly measures cerebral functional activity by uptake of a radiotracer, which follows regional cerebral blood flow. Brain 3D Thresholded SPECT scans are thresholded three dimensional images derived from brain SPECT data. A retrospective community study of longitudinal (before and after treatment) brain 3D Thresholded SPECT scans of 73 patients with all-cause psychiatric disorders (most frequent diagnostic clusters: attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, post-mild traumatic brain injury, affective disorders, psychotic disorders, post-viral chronic syndromes), shows these baseline SPECT scans predict improvement (non-worsening to large improvement) in clinical functioning with a sensitivity of 94% (95% confidence interval 86-98%) and a specificity of 67% (95% confidence interval 21-94%). In contrast, contemporaneous analysis by the same radiologist of conventional 2D reading of the same before and after treatment brain SPECT scan data of the same 73 patients, predicted improvement (non-worsening to large improvement) in clinical functioning with a sensitivity of only 26% (95% confidence interval 17-37%) although with a specificity of 100% (95% confidence interval 44-100%). These data suggest 3D Thresholded SPECT scans can provide the clinician with a more objective measure for verifying improvement in psychiatric disorders seen in the community, consistent with prior studies of SPECT as a measure of neurobiological change. Furthermore, these data suggest 3D Thresholded SPECT scans may have clinical application in guiding treatment and potentially improving outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: SPECT; attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder; biomarker; community psychiatry; neuroimaging; post-viral syndrome; traumatic brain injury
Year: 2022 PMID: 35401270 PMCID: PMC8990854 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2022.787186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
FIGURE 1Conventional (A,B) and 3D thresholded (C–F) displays of pre-treatment (A,C,D), and post-treatment (B,E,F) SPECT scan results for one representative patient. A 49 year old male with symptoms of ADHD and mood dysregulation underwent a SPECT scan. Both conventional (A) and 3-D thresholded SPECT displays (C,D) prior to treatment show diffuse cortical hypoperfusion most severe in the bilateral temporal lobes and the orbitofrontal cortices, as well as over-activity of the thalamus [red arrow in panel (D)]. Post-treatment scans (B,E,F) show improved temporal, dorsal frontal, and parietal lobe perfusion, normalization of thalamic perfusion, and a reduction of hypoperfusion in the orbitofrontal cortices.
FIGURE 23D thresholded displays: 56-year-old female with Lyme disease pre-treatment (A,B) and post-treatment (C,D) clinically improved. 33-year-old male with mood dysregulation and ADHD pre-treatment (E,F) and post-treatment (G,H). There was clinical improvement with a mood stabilizer. However, due to the prefrontal hypoperfusion (G) a stimulant was added resulting in further improvement. 26-year-old female with mTBI pre-treatment (I,J) and post-treatment (K,L) clinically improved.
Patient diagnoses.
| Diagnostic cluster (DSM-5 diagnosis or chapter) | Number of patients | % | Mean age (standard deviation) (years) | Mean duration between scans (standard deviation)(days) |
| Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder | 24 | 33% | 47.5 (9.1) | 347 (248) |
| Post-mTBI (mild traumatic brain injury) (DSM-5 chapter: Neurocognitive Disorders, those disorders “due to traumatic brain injury”) | 19 | 26% | 45.4 (12.9) | 405 (414) |
| Affective disorders (DSM-5 chapters: Bipolar and Related Disorders, Depressive Disorders) | 11 | 15% | 54.4 (16.9) | 702 (1,043) |
| Psychotic disorders (DSM-5 chapter: Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other Psychotic Disorders) | 4 | 5% | 55.5 (7.0) | 373 (305) |
| Post-viral chronic (“Long Haul“) syndrome (DSM-5 chapter: Neurocognitive disorders, those disorders due to post-viral sequalae “due to another medical condition”) | 4 | 5% | 51.8 (9.6) | 263 (159) |
| Other neurological (DSM-5 chapter: Neurocognitive Disorders, due to neurological conditions) | 4 | 5% | 52.0 (11.2) | 503 (396) |
| Chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia (DSM-5 diagnosis: Somatic Symptom Disorder) | 3 | 4% | 55.3 (10.0) | 653 (479) |
| Anxiety disorders (DSM-5 chapter: Anxiety Disorders) | 2 | 3% | 51.0 (12.7) | 896 (1118) |
| Chronic pain (DSM-5 diagnosis: Somatic Symptom Disorder, persistent, with predominant pain) | 1 | 1% | 42 | 105 |
| Dementia (DSM-5 chapter: Neurocognitive Disorders, due to Alzheimer’s disease or other medical conditions causing dementia) | 1 | 1% | 60 | 322 |
| Total Patients | 73 |
Sensitivities, specificities and positive predictive values for conventional (“2D”) brain SPECT and 3D thresholded brain SPECT images in predicting improvement in psychiatric disorders.
| Sensitivity (95% confidence interval) | Specificity (95% confidence interval) | Positive predictive value (PPV) (95% confidence interval) | |
| All Conventional (“2D”) SPECT Scans | 25.7% (17-37%) | 100% (44-100%) | 100% (82%-100%) |
| All 3D Thresholded SPECT Scans | 94.3% (86-98%) | 66.7% (21%-94%) | 98.5% (92-100%) |
|
| |||
| Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) | 3D:95.7% (79–99%) | 3D:100% (21%–100%) | 3D:100% (85–100%) |
| 2D:26.1% (13–47%) | 2D:100% (21–100%) | 2D:100% (61–100%) | |
| Post-Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (mTBI) | 3D: 89.5% (69–97%) | 3D: not computable | 3D: 100% (82–100%) |
| 2D:21% (9–43%) | 2D: not computable | 2D: 100% (51–100%) | |
| Affective Disorders | 3D: 100% (74–100%) | 3D: not computable | 3D: 100% (74–100%) |
| 2D:27.3% (10–57%) | 2D: not computable | 2D:100% (44–100%) | |
| Psychotic Disorders | 3D: 75% (30–95%) | 3D: not computable | 3D: 100% (44–100%) |
| 2D:0% (0–49%) | 2D: not computable | 2D: not computable | |
| Post-Viral Chronic Syndromes | 3D: 100% (44–100%) | 3D: 100% (21–100%) | 3D: 100% (44–100%) |
| 2D: 33.3% (6–79%) | 2D: 100% (21–100%) | 2D: 100% (21–100%) | |
| Other Neurological | 3D: 100% (44–100%) | 3D: 0% (0–80%) | 3D: 75% (30–95%) |
| 2D: 33.3% (6–79%) | 2D:100% (21–100%) | 2D: 100% (21–100%) |
Sensitivities and specificities for conventional (“2D”) brain SPECT and 3D thresholded brain SPECT scans in predicting improvement in patients with a diagnosis of ADHD associated with different nuclear medicine radiologists reading the scans.
| Radiologist | 3D thresholded SPECT sensitivity (95% confidence limits) | 3D thresholded SPECT specificity (95% confidence limits) | 2D conventional SPECT sensitivity (95% confidence limits) | 2D conventional SPECT specificity (95% confidence limits) |
| A ( | 100% (61–100%) | 100% (21–100%) | 0% (0–39%) | 100% (21–100%) |
| B ( | 100% (79–100%) | Not computable | 43% (21–67%) | Not computable |
| C ( | 67% (21–94%) | Not computable | 0% (0–56%) | Not computable |