Does supplementation of contrast MR imaging with thallium-201 brain SPECT improve differentiation between benign and malignant ring-like contrast-enhanced cerebral lesions?

To determine whether thallium-201 ((201)Tl) brain single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) could supplement magnetic resonance (MR) imaging diagnostic information by visual comparison of two separate data sets from patients with ring-like contrast-enhanced cerebral lesions. A combination o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of nuclear medicine 2007-07, Vol.21 (5), p.251-256
Hauptverfasser: Kita, Tamotsu, Hayashi, Katsumi, Yamamoto, Masayoshi, Kawauchi, Toshio, Sakata, Ikuko, Iwasaki, Yoshie, Kosuda, Shigeru
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To determine whether thallium-201 ((201)Tl) brain single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) could supplement magnetic resonance (MR) imaging diagnostic information by visual comparison of two separate data sets from patients with ring-like contrast-enhanced cerebral lesions. A combination of MR imaging and (201)Tl brain SPECT sets obtained from 13 patients (10 men, 3 women) ranging in age from 26 years to 86 years (mean 61.0 years) were retrospectively reviewed. A total of 12 patients had a solitary lesion, and the others had multiple lesions. All but two intracranial foci were pathologically confirmed. The final diagnoses were six glioblastomas, two cerebral metastases from lung cancer, and one each of abscess, resolving hematoma, primary central nervous system lymphoma, toxoplasmosis, and radiation necrosis. The two separate image formats (MR images and SPECT) were shown to ten readers with practical experience. All of the MR images for each patient were shown to each reader first. After interpreting them, the readers were shown the SPECT images. Images were scored in terms of how benign or malignant the foci were on a 5-point scale from "definitely benign" to "definitely malignant." The improvement in the performance of all ten readers was from 67.7% to 93.8% in mean accuracy (P = 0.0028) and from 0.730 to 0.971 in mean Az value (P = 0.0069) after they were shown the (201)Tl brain SPECT images. (201)Tl brain SPECT should substantially increase confidence in the diagnosis of intracranial lesions with ring-like contrast enhancement when MR imaging does not permit differentiation between benign and malignant disease.
ISSN:0914-7187
1864-6433
DOI:10.1007/s12149-007-0026-y