| Literature DB >> 36070114 |
Lisbeth Marner1,2, Kirsten Korsholm3,4, Lasse Anderberg4, Markus N Lonsdale3, Mads Radmer Jensen3, Eva Brødsgaard3, Charlotte L Denholt4, Nic Gillings4, Ian Law5,4, Lars Friberg3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dopamine transporter (DAT) imaging of striatum is clinically used in Parkinson's disease (PD) and neurodegenerative parkinsonian syndromes (PS) especially in the early disease stages. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the diagnostic performance of the recently developed tracer for DAT imaging [18F]FE-PE2I PET/CT to the reference standard [123I]FP-CIT SPECT.Entities:
Keywords: Brain; Cerebral; DaTscan; Diagnostic accuracy; Neurodegenerative; Parkinson’s disease; Positron emission tomography
Year: 2022 PMID: 36070114 PMCID: PMC9452620 DOI: 10.1186/s13550-022-00930-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EJNMMI Res ISSN: 2191-219X Impact factor: 3.434
Fig. 1Delineations of anatomical structures. Top row: Five regions of interest (ROI) representing caudate nucleus and putamen bilaterally as well as the occipital lobe were placed on a fused section of the [123I]FP-CIT SPECT. Bottom: Three consecutive axial slices (superior—> inferior) of a [18F]FE-PE2I PET dataset in MNI space illustrating the automated volume of interest (VOI) delineation of putamen, caudate nucleus and cerebellar grey matter
Comparison between the two clinical setups/workflows
| [123I]FP-CIT SPECT | [18F]FE-PE2I PET (30–40-min protocol) | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-life of tracer (transport logistics) | 13 h 13 min | 1 h 50 min |
| Patient time | 4 h 15 min | 1 h 30 min |
| Time in scanner | 30 min | 15 min |
| Staff time | 1 h 50 min | 1 h 15 min |
| Scanner | Short moving bore | Long narrow bore |
| Pretreatment to block thyroid 123I uptake | Yes | No |
| Radiation exposure* | 185 MBq / 4.6 mSv | 185 MBq /4.3 mSv |
| Sensitivity to SSRI treatment | Yes [ | Insignificant [ |
| Approximate spatial resolution | 10 mm | 5 mm |
SSRI selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors
Time estimates are based on logistics in our high throughput clinic with 20–30 patients/week
*Based on an effective dose of 0.025 mSv/MBq for [123I]FP-CIT[38] and 0.023 mSv/MBq for [18F]FE-PE2I[44]
Fig. 2Sample images of two patients evaluated with [123I]FP-CIT SPECT and [18F]FE-PE2I PET. PS: Parkinsonian syndromes
Agreement between [123I]FP-CIT and [18F]FE-PE2I
PS Parkinsonian syndromes
Measurement of agreement kappa: 0.85 [95% C.I.: 0.76–0.94]. Agreement of normal vs abnormal, kappa: 0.92 [95% C.I.: 0.84–1.00]
*No prior structural imaging available and interpretation of vascular changes based on CT performed in combination with PET
Fig. 3Short versus longer acquisition protocol. Box-and-whisker plots of putamen/caudate nucleus ratio (top) and SBR for putamen (bottom; lowest SBR of right/left hemisphere) for 92 patients illustrating the difference between normal and abnormal patients. Six patients were excluded due to injected dose below 100 MBq. Left column: 30–40-min reconstruction, right column: 17–42 min. No significant difference in the ability to separate abnormal and normal scans was found
Fig. 4Short versus longer acquisition protocol. Bland–Altman plots of 17–42-min reconstructions versus 30–40-min reconstructions for same patients as in Fig. 3. Triangles represent patients with discrepancy between PET and SPECT reading. The purple area represent the mean difference with 95% confidence limits (C.I.), the green area represent the upper limit of agreement with 95% C.I., and the red area the lower limit of agreement. Please note the relative higher values for putamen SBR (left) using the shorter reconstruction with 95% of patients being within 25% difference. Putamen/caudate nucleus ratio (right) show similarly relatively higher values but the difference is smaller and within 10%. The difference stress the need for using the same acquisition protocol in a future normal database for comparison
Fig. 5PET versus SPECT. The lowest putamen/caudate nucleus ratio of the two hemispheres for each subject, PET plotted against SPECT. The dotted line is the line of identity. Red circles are patients categorized as abnormal while blue are normal. Note that delineation and semiquantitative measure are obtained with different methods for PET and SPECT
Fig. 6PET versus SPECT Bland–Altman plots. Same data as in Fig. 5 shown as Bland–Altman plots. Triangles represent patients with discrepancy between PET and SPECT reading. The purple area represent the mean difference with 95% confidence limits (C.I.), the green area represent the upper limit of agreement with 95% C.I., and the red area the lower limit of agreement. As expected PET show relative higher values for putamen SBR (left) for PET compared to SPECT with 95% of patients being within 50% difference. Putamen/caudate nucleus ratio (right) show similarly relatively higher values but the difference is smaller and within 35%