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First published online June 12, 2009, 10.2967/jnumed.104.007831
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Journal of Nuclear Medicine Vol. 50 No. 7 1062-1071
© 2009 by Society of Nuclear Medicine

doi: 10.2967/jnumed.104.007831

Clinical Investigation

Reproducibility and Accuracy of Quantitative Myocardial Blood Flow Assessment with 82Rb PET: Comparison with 13N-Ammonia PET

Georges El Fakhri1, Arash Kardan1, Arkadiusz Sitek2, Sharmila Dorbala2,3, Nathalie Abi-Hatem1,4, Youmna Lahoud4, Alan Fischman5, Martha Coughlan2, Tsunehiro Yasuda1 and Marcelo F. Di Carli2,3

1 Division of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts; 2 Division of Nuclear Medicine, Department of Radiology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; 3 Cardiovascular Imaging Program, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; 4 Faculty of Medicine, Holy Spirit University of Kaslik, Mount Lebanon, Lebanon; and 5 Shriners Hospital for Children, Boston, Massachusetts

Correspondence: For correspondence or reprints contact: Georges El Fakhri, Division of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital, 55 Fruit St., Boston, MA 02114. E-mail: elfakhri{at}pet.mgh.harvard.edu

82Rb cardiac PET allows the assessment of myocardial perfusion with a column generator in clinics that lack a cyclotron. There is evidence that the quantitation of myocardial blood flow (MBF) and coronary flow reserve (CFR) with dynamic 82Rb PET is feasible. The objectives of this study were to determine the accuracy and reproducibility of MBF estimates from dynamic 82Rb PET by using our methodology for generalized factor analysis (generalized factor analysis of dynamic sequences [GFADS]) and compartment analysis. Methods: Reproducibility was evaluated in 22 subjects undergoing dynamic rest and dipyridamole stress 82Rb PET studies at a 2-wk interval. The inter- and intraobserver variability of MBF quantitation with dynamic 82Rb PET was assessed with 4 repeated estimations by each of 4 observers. Accuracy was evaluated in 20 subjects undergoing dynamic rest and dipyridamole stress PET studies with 82Rb and 13N-ammonia, respectively. The left ventricular and right ventricular blood pool and left ventricular tissue time–activity curves were estimated by GFADS. MBF was estimated by fitting the blood pool and tissue time–activity curves to a 2-compartment kinetic model for 82Rb and to a 3-compartment model for 13N-ammonia. CFR was estimated as the ratio of peak MBF to baseline MBF. Results: The reproducibility of the MBF estimates in repeated 82Rb studies was very good at rest and during peak stress (R2= 0.935), as was the reproducibility of the CFR estimates (R2 = 0.841). The slope of the correlation line was very close to one for the estimation of MBF (0.986) and CFR (0.960) in repeated 82Rb studies. The intraobserver reliability was less than 3% for the estimation of MBF at rest and during peak stress as well as for the estimation of CFR. The interobserver reliabilities were 0.950 at rest and 0.975 at peak stress. The correlation between myocardial flow estimates obtained at rest and those obtained during peak stress in 82Rb and 13N-ammonia studies was very good (R2 = 0.857). Bland–Altman plots comparing CFR estimated with 82Rb and CFR estimated with 13N-ammonia revealed an underestimation of CFR with 82Rb compared with 13N-ammonia; the underestimation was within ±1.96 SD. Conclusion: MBF quantitation with GFADS and dynamic 82Rb PET demonstrated excellent reproducibility as well as intra- and interobserver reliability. The accuracy of the absolute quantitation of MBF with factor and compartment analyses and dynamic 82Rb PET was very good, compared with that achieved with 13N-ammonia, for MBF of up to 2.5 mL/g/min.

Key Words: myocardial blood flow • PET • 82Rb • 13N-ammonia

COPYRIGHT © 2009 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine, Inc.


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