Loading…

Influence of N-butylscopolamine on SUV in FDG PET of the bowel

Objectives Peristalsis can lead to confusing FDG PET bowel uptake artefacts and potential for recording inaccurate mean standardised uptake value (SUV) measurements in PET-CT scans. Accordingly, we investigate the influence of different SUV normalisations on FDG PET uptake of the bowel and assess wh...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Annals of nuclear medicine 2009-07, Vol.23 (5), p.471-478
Main Authors: Sanghera, Bal, Emmott, Jennifer, Wellsted, David, Chambers, Jane, Wong, Wai-Lup
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Objectives Peristalsis can lead to confusing FDG PET bowel uptake artefacts and potential for recording inaccurate mean standardised uptake value (SUV) measurements in PET-CT scans. Accordingly, we investigate the influence of different SUV normalisations on FDG PET uptake of the bowel and assess which one(s) have least dependence on body size factors in patients with and without the introduction of the anti-peristalsis agent N -butylscopolamine (Buscopan). Methods This study consisted of 92 prospective oncology patients, each having a whole body 18 F-FDG PET scan. Correlations were investigated between height, weight, glucose, body mass index (bmi), lean body mass (lbm) and body surface area (bsa) with maximum and mean SUV recorded for bowel normalised to weight (SUV w ), lbm (SUV lbm ), bsa (SUV bsa ) and blood glucose corrected versions (SUV wg , SUV lbmg , SUV bsag ). Results Standardised uptake value normalisations were significantly different between control and Buscopan groups with less variability experienced within individual SUV normalisations by the administration of Buscopan. Mean SUV normalisations accounted for 80% of correlations in the control group and 100% in the Buscopan group. Further, >86% of all correlations across both groups were dominated by mean SUV normalisations of which, about 69% were accounted for by SUV bsa and SUV bsag . Conclusions We recommend avoiding mean SUV bsa and individual glucose normalisations especially, mean SUV bsag as these dominated albeit relatively weak correlations with body size factors in control and Buscopan groups. Mean and maximum SUV w and SUV lbm were shown to be independent of any body size parameters investigated in both groups and therefore considered suitable for monitoring FDG PET uptake in the normal bowel for our patient cohort.
ISSN:0914-7187
1864-6433
DOI:10.1007/s12149-009-0263-3