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The Journal of Nuclear Medicine Vol. 32 No. 10 1873-1876
© 1991 by Society of Nuclear Medicine
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Early and Late Lesion-to-Non-Lesion Ratio of Thallium-201-Chloride Uptake in the Evaluation of "Cold" Thyroid Nodules

Ruth Hardoff, Elizabeth Baron and Maxim Sheinfeld

Departments of Nuclear Medicine and Endocrinology, Lady Davis Carmel Hospital, Haifa, Israel

Correspondence: For reprints contact: Ruth Hardoff MD, DSc, Department of Nuclear Medicine, Lady Davis Carmel Hospital, 7 Michael St., Haifa 34362, Israel.

ABSTRACT

Forty-nine consecutive patients with "cold" thyroid nodules were studied using early and late visual and semiquantitative measurements of 201Tl uptake in the nodule to differentiate benign from malignant nodules. The visual method compared 201Tl uptake in the nodule to the normal thyroid tissue. The semiquantitative method used a lesion-to-non-lesion (L/N) ratio of the same areas. Both measurements were carried out early (15 min) and late (3 hr) following 201Tl injection. The reproducibility of the method for the early and late measurements was tested for intraobserver and interobserver variability as well as for repeatability coefficients. The visual method resulted in 43% sensitivity and 79% specificity for the detection of malignant nodules. The L/N method showed that an early threshold of 1.55 chosen by receiver characteristic analysis had a sensitivity of 57% and a specificity of 86%, while the late ratio of 0.99 had a sensitivity of 100% and a specificity of 62%. It is concluded that a L/N 201Tl uptake method performed 3 hr following 201TI injection is superior to a visual scoring method as well as to the early L/N 201Tl uptake in detecting malignant thyroid nodules.







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Copyright © 1991 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine.