Refining the role of presurgical PET/4D-CT in a large series of patients with primary hyperparathyroidism undergoing [<sup>18</sup>F]Fluorocholine PET/CT.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_DDDB1874399A
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Refining the role of presurgical PET/4D-CT in a large series of patients with primary hyperparathyroidism undergoing [<sup>18</sup>F]Fluorocholine PET/CT.
Journal
European journal of clinical investigation
ISSN
1365-2362 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0014-2972
Publication state
In Press
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: aheadofprint
Publication Status: aheadofprint
Abstract
4D-CT has garnered attention as complementary imaging for patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT). Herein we evaluated a diagnostic strategy using [ <sup>18</sup> F]Fluorocholine Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography (PET/CT), followed by 4D-CT integrated into PET/4D-CT after negative/inconclusive PET/CT results in a single-center retrospective cohort of 166 pHPT patients who underwent parathyroidectomy after [ <sup>18</sup> F]Fluorocholine PET/4D-CT.
PET/CT and 4D-CT images were interpreted by three nuclear medicine physicians and one expert radiologist. Pathological findings were documented, and concordance rates were assessed. PET/CT results were categorized as positive/negative, with positive cases rated on a 3-level certitude scale: low, moderate, high. Inconclusive cases included low/moderate positivity. The added value of PET/4D-CT was assessed for negative/inconclusive cases through joint reading.
PET/CT lesion-based analysis showed almost perfect interobserver concordance (Cohen's kappa >.8). Across the cohort, PET/CT had a sensitivity of 83%, specificity of 97%, PPV of 90% and NPV of 94%. For 4D-CT, these values were sensitivity: 53%, specificity: 84%, PPV: 56% and NPV: 82%. PET/CT was significantly more accurate than 4D-CT. Among 44 patients with negative/inconclusive results, PET/CT had sensitivity: 60%, specificity: 91%, PPV: 71% and NPV: 86%. In the same patients, sensitivity and specificity of the sequential diagnostic algorithm increased to 80% and 97%, showing significantly better global accuracy (92% vs. 83%) than standard PET/CT.
We support a personalized imaging algorithm for pHPT, placing [ <sup>18</sup> F]Fluorocholine PET/CT at the forefront, followed by 4D-CT integrated into PET/4D-CT in the same imaging session for negative/inconclusive results. When PET/CT results are clearly positive, the additional sensitivity benefit of 4D-CT is minimal.
PET/CT and 4D-CT images were interpreted by three nuclear medicine physicians and one expert radiologist. Pathological findings were documented, and concordance rates were assessed. PET/CT results were categorized as positive/negative, with positive cases rated on a 3-level certitude scale: low, moderate, high. Inconclusive cases included low/moderate positivity. The added value of PET/4D-CT was assessed for negative/inconclusive cases through joint reading.
PET/CT lesion-based analysis showed almost perfect interobserver concordance (Cohen's kappa >.8). Across the cohort, PET/CT had a sensitivity of 83%, specificity of 97%, PPV of 90% and NPV of 94%. For 4D-CT, these values were sensitivity: 53%, specificity: 84%, PPV: 56% and NPV: 82%. PET/CT was significantly more accurate than 4D-CT. Among 44 patients with negative/inconclusive results, PET/CT had sensitivity: 60%, specificity: 91%, PPV: 71% and NPV: 86%. In the same patients, sensitivity and specificity of the sequential diagnostic algorithm increased to 80% and 97%, showing significantly better global accuracy (92% vs. 83%) than standard PET/CT.
We support a personalized imaging algorithm for pHPT, placing [ <sup>18</sup> F]Fluorocholine PET/CT at the forefront, followed by 4D-CT integrated into PET/4D-CT in the same imaging session for negative/inconclusive results. When PET/CT results are clearly positive, the additional sensitivity benefit of 4D-CT is minimal.
Keywords
4D‐CT, PET, adenoma, fluorocholine, hyperparathyroidism, parathyroid
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
25/10/2024 14:51
Last modification date
02/11/2024 7:10