1.Clinical application of normalized residual activity as a semiquantitative adjunct in assessing renal emptying in pediatric diuretic scans
The Philippine Journal of Nuclear Medicine 2023;18(1):28-35
Background:
The most recent pediatric diuretic imaging guidelines recommend the use of normalized residual activity
(NORA) as a semiquantitative index of renal tracer drainage. It is defined as the ratio of post-void renal counts to 1-2 minute post-injection renal counts, with values less than 1 indicative of good drainage. We present two instances where NORA calculation was adjunctive in the evaluation of obstructive uropathy.
Case Presentation:
The first patient was a 3-month-old male with left-sided congenital hydronephrosis. On dynamic imaging, the diseased kidney showed adequate perfusion and parenchymal extraction; moderate to severe pelvicalyceal tracer retention exhibited good response to diuretic. The pre-diuretic NORA of 1.62 declined to 0.28 after furosemide challenge, concordant with imaging findings that were negative for obstruction. The second patient was a 7-week-old male, also with congenital hydronephrosis of the left kidney. Dynamic images showed the diseased kidney with diminished perfusion and function, as well as pelvicalyceal tracer retention which became more severe after the diuretic was given. The pre-diuretic NORA was 1.81, which became 1.18 post-diuretic. This inadequate decline supplemented imaging findings pointing to significant obstruction. Other semiquantitative parameters have preceded NORA; however, clearance half-time is not validated as a marker of obstructive uropathy in infants and children, and output efficiency requires specialized software to calculate.
Standardization of NORA determination is largely provided for by the guidelines recommending a perirenal
background region of interest, as well as minimizing the interval between starting camera acquisition and
injecting the tracer.
Conclusion
Semiquantitative analysis through NORA calculation gives relevant supporting information in the reporting of renal tracer drainage among pediatric patients. Further studies are needed to ascertain its applicability among adults and its diagnostic value in a larger sample of affected Filipino children.
2.A comparative study of different methods of estimating glomerular filtration rate in a subset of Filipinos with normal renal function
Patrick Earl A. Fernando ; Patricia A. Bautista-Peñ ; alosa
The Philippine Journal of Nuclear Medicine 2020;15(2):8-17
Kidney function is commonly quantified using the glomerular filtration rate (GFR). However, the gold standard of
measuring GFR, inulin clearance, is not practical for daily clinical use. This study compares different methods of
GFR estimation based on serum creatinine, plasma levels of 99mTc-diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA), and
camera acquisition of 99mTc-DTPA uptake. Seventy-five Filipino adults between ages 20 and 35 presumed to have
normal kidneys were recruited. Each subject underwent gamma camera scintigraphy using the Gates and Inoue
protocols after receiving a dose of 99mTc-DTPA. Blood samples were subsequently extracted at 1 hour and 3 hours
after tracer injection, and GFRs were calculated based on single- and double-plasma sampling methods (SPSM and
DPSM, respectively). Serum creatinine was also measured to derive GFR using the CKD-EPI, MDRD, and CockroftGault equations. Each method was correlated with a reference standard (DPSM) based on accuracy, linear
regression, bias, and precision. SPSM tends to overestimate GFR unlike the other methods evaluated, but
otherwise shows the most favorable diagnostic performance among the six methods when correlated with DPSM.
The Inoue method appears modestly better than the routinely utilized Gates protocol, though both methods
exhibit lack of precision. The CKD-EPI formula shows similar, if not slightly superior, diagnostic properties to the
MDRD and Cockroft-Gault equations, thus confirming its validity for use in this Filipino population subset. Further
studies are needed, particularly involving SPSM and CKD-EPI, to determine the applicability of our findings in
Filipinos with varying degrees of kidney function. It is hoped that modifications to these methods can be made that
are tailor-fit to derive more accurate and population-specific GFR values.
Glomerular Filtration Rate
;
Creatinine
3.Role of 18F-FDG PET/CT in the diagnostic work-up of renal cell carcinoma presenting as low back pain
Patrick Earl A Fernando ; Patricia A. Bautista
The Philippine Journal of Nuclear Medicine 2018;13(1):7-11
Low back pain is common among adults, but back pain secondary to a metastatic carcinoma is rare. We present a case of a 71-year-old male with low back pain who was referred for a 18F-FDG PET/CT scan due to suspicious-looking skeletal lesions on MRI. On PET/CT, multiple foci of increased FDG uptake were noted in the axial and appendicular skeleton. When correlated with a non-contrast CT stonogram done 2 months prior, an exophytic lesion in the right kidney did not show FDG update; rather, it was in the left kidney where an FDG-avid focus was seen. A concomitant bone scan revealed fewer bone lesions when compared with the PET/CT findings. Biopsies of the left renal mass and a vertebral lession were consistent with metastatic renal cell carcinoma. While not a first-line diagnostic test in the management of low back pain, 18F-FDG PET/CT scan can be valuable in cases where metasis highly suspected without a known primary carcinoma site.
Low Back Pain
;
Carcinoma, Renal Cell
4.Utility of radiolabeled leukocyte and bone marrow scintigraphy with SPECT/CT in the diagnostic work-up- of the painful prosthetic joint: A single-institution experience
Patrick Earl A. Fernando ; Patricia A. Bautista
The Philippine Journal of Nuclear Medicine 2019;14(1):18-25
In tbhe assessment of prosthetic joint pains, differentiating between aseptic loosening and infection can be challenging due to their similarities in clinical presentation and histopathology. Combined radiolabeled leukocyte and bone marrow scintigraphy and SPECT/CT is considered the most suitable nuclear imaging modality for this purpose. However, this is infrequently performed in our local setting. We present two cases where these studies were appropriately performed with different scan outcomes. The first case involved a 67-year-old male with painful right knee prosthesis and an alleged history of recurrent periprosthetic joint infection (PJI). The leukocyte tagging scan and marrow scan images were found to be congruent, which was more compatible with aseptic loosening. No emergent surgical intervention was done in our hospital, and the patient returned to this home territory for further management. The second case was a 72-year-old male with progressive pain in his left prosthetic hiip which began after surgery a year prior. Scan images were incongruent, suggestive of PJI; this was confired on joint aspiration and eventual surgical revision. Despite this imaging study's high sensitvity and high specificity, it has not been well-received in management algorihms of PJI. Collaboration between clinicans and nuclear imaging specilists is key in increasing the general use of these procedures.
Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon
;
Radionuclide Imaging
5.Adjunctive role of dual time point imaging in evaluating bone lesions with increased 18F-PSMA-1007 uptake
Patrick Earl A. Fernando ; Jamilla Cecilia L. Gomez
The Philippine Journal of Nuclear Medicine 2023;18(2):14-17
Background:
Non-specific focal uptake in the skeleton is a diagnostic pitfall on 18F-PSMA-1007 PET/CT, but adjunctive
measures to aid interpretation of these lesions are currently lacking. We present two cases where dual time
point imaging provided additional information.
Case Presentation:
The first patient had a PI-RADS 3 lesion on MRI. No PSMA-avid abnormality was seen on PET, save for focal
uptake in the right pubis with no anatomic correlate. Additional imaging showed a decrease in lesion SUV, and
this was interpreted as benign. Another patient, diagnosed with prostate cancer, had multiple PSMA-avid pelvic
foci. Two suspiciously malignant bone lesions had increasing SUV trend after dual time point imaging despite
only faint sclerosis on CT. In contrast, one faint PSMA-avid lesion with no anatomic abnormality was read as
benign after a decrease in SUV. A decrease in lesion SUV may point to a benign etiology, while an increase
would heighten suspicion for malignancy. One possible molecular explanation is that a true
PSMA-overexpressing lesion would bind to the tracer for a longer period than a false positive.
Conclusion
Dual time point imaging provides additional information that may be useful in the interpretation of non-specificskeletal lesions with increased 18F-PSMA-1007 uptake.
PSMA-1007
;
Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography