99mTechnetium pyrophosphate scintigraphy with cadmium zinc telluride cameras is a highly sensitive and specific imaging modality to diagnose transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis
Publication/Presentation Date
4-1-2020
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis (ATTR) is a rare, but underdiagnosed, cardiomyopathy. Traditionally diagnosed invasively, ATTR can be diagnosed with non-invasive
METHODS: Forty-three subjects (24 ATTR, 19 non-ATTR) were imaged with Philips Dual-Head Anger (planar) and General Electric CZT cameras. Myocardial uptake was quantified by heart-to-contralateral (H/CL) ratios. CZT scans were quantified by two readers blinded to planar H/CL, with one repeating blinded quantification. Using the previously validated diagnostic threshold (H/CL ≥ 1.5), sensitivity and specificity of CZT scintigraphy was measured. McNemar's test and Pearson's correlation coefficient were calculated.
RESULTS: Among subjects (76.7% male, age 77 ± 9), there was no significant difference in proportion of ATTR-positive identification between modalities. There was high correlation between CZT and planar H/CL ratios (r = 0.92, P < 0.0001), with low intra- [ICC = 0.89 (0.80-0.94)] and inter-observer [ICC = 0.80 (0.65-0.89)] variability. CZT scintigraphy had 100% sensitivity and specificity for diagnosing ATTR.
CONCLUSION:
Volume
27
Issue
2
First Page
371
Last Page
380
ISSN
1532-6551
Published In/Presented At
Flaherty, Kathleen R et al. “99mTechnetium pyrophosphate scintigraphy with cadmium zinc telluride cameras is a highly sensitive and specific imaging modality to diagnose transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis.” “La gammagrafía con tecnecio 99 m pirofosfato (99mTc-PYP) con cámaras de teluro de zinc y cadmio es una modalidad de imagen con alta sensibilidad y especificidad para diagnosticar amiloidosis cardíaca por transtiretina.” Journal of nuclear cardiology : official publication of the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology vol. 27,2 (2020): 371-380. doi:10.1007/s12350-019-01831-8
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
31463816
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article