Influence of Gating and Attenuation-correction for Diagnostic Performance of Usual Rest/stress Myocardial Perfusion SPECT in Coronary Artery Disease.
- Author:
Myung Chul LEE
;
June Key CHUNG
;
Dong Soo LEE
;
Kyeong Min KIM
;
Young SO
;
Jeong Seok YEO
;
Gi Jeong CHEON
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords:
Coronary arteriosclerosis;
Tc-99m MIBI;
ROC curve;
SPECT;
Gated myocardial SPECT
- MeSH:
Coronary Artery Disease*;
Coronary Vessels*;
Diagnosis;
Humans;
Perfusion*;
ROC Curve;
Sensitivity and Specificity;
Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon*
- From:Korean Journal of Nuclear Medicine
1999;33(2):131-142
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
PURPOSE: Either gated myocardial perfusion SPECT or attenuation corrected SPECT can be used to improve specificity in the diagnosis of coronary artery disease. We investigated in this study whether gating or attenuation correction improved diagnostic performance of rest/stress perfusion SPECT in patients having intermediate pre-test likelihood of coronary artery disease. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Sixty-eight patients underwent rest attenuation-corrected T1-20l/dipyridamole stress gated attenuation-corrected Tc-99m-MIBI SPECT using an ADAC vertex camera (M:F=29:39, aged 59+/-12 years, coronary artery stenosis> or =70%. one vessel: 13, two vessel: 18, three vessel: 8, normal: 29). Using a five-point scale, three physicians graded the post-test likelihood of coronary artery disease for each arterial territory (1 normal, 2: possibly normal 3:equivocal, 4: possibly abnormal, 5: abnormal). Sensitivity, specificity and area under receiver-operating-characteristic curves were compared for each operator between three METHODS: (A) non-attenuation-corrected SPECT; (B) gated SPECT added to (A); and (C) attenuation-corrected SPECT added to (B). RESULTS: When grade 3 was used as the criteria for coronary artery disease, no differences in sensitivity and specificity were found between the three methods for each operator Areas under receiver- operating-characteristic curves for diagnosis of coronary artery disease revealed no differences between each modality (p>005). CONCLUSION: In patients at intermediate risk of coronary artery disease, gated SPECT and attenuation-corrected SPECT did not improve diagnostic performance.