RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 131I-6β-Iodomethyl-19-Norcholesterol SPECT/CT for Primary Aldosteronism Patients with Inconclusive Adrenal Venous Sampling and CT Results JF Journal of Nuclear Medicine JO J Nucl Med FD Society of Nuclear Medicine SP 1631 OP 1637 DO 10.2967/jnumed.109.064873 VO 50 IS 10 A1 Ruoh-Fang Yen A1 Vin-Cent Wu A1 Kao-Lang Liu A1 Mei-Fang Cheng A1 Yen-Wen Wu A1 Shih-Chieh Chueh A1 Wei-Chou Lin A1 Kwan-Dun Wu A1 Kai-Yuan Tzen A1 Ching-Chu Lu A1 the TAIPAI Study Group YR 2009 UL http://jnm.snmjournals.org/content/50/10/1631.abstract AB The 2 main causes of primary aldosteronism (PA) are aldosterone-producing adenoma (APA) and idiopathic adrenal hyperplasia (IAH). Dexamethasone-suppression 131I-6β-iodomethyl-19-norcholesterol (NP-59) adrenal scintigraphy can assess the functioning of the adrenal cortex. This study evaluated the diagnostic usefulness of NP-59 SPECT/CT in differentiating APA from IAH and in predicting postadrenalectomy clinical outcome for PA patients who had inconclusive adrenal venous sampling (AVS) and CT results. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the 31 adrenal lesions of 27 patients (age range, 33–71 y; mean age ± SD, 50.4 ± 10.9 y) who had been clinically confirmed (by saline infusion and captopril tests) to have PA, had inconclusive CT and AVS test results, and had undergone NP-59 imaging before adrenalectomy. The accuracy of NP-59 imaging was determined by comparison with histopathologic findings. Results: NP-59 SPECT/CT gave us 18 true-positive, 3 false-positive, 6 true-negative, and 4 false-negative results. Compared with planar imaging, SPECT/CT significantly improved diagnostic accuracy and prognostic predicting ability (P = 0.0390 and P = 0.0141, respectively). The NP-59 results were negative for 7 of the 23 patients with unilateral adrenal lesions, and none of these 7 patients had shown postsurgical clinical improvement. Conclusion: NP-59 SPECT/CT is an effective imaging tool for differentiating APA from IAH in PA patients whose CT and AVS results are inconclusive. Our results suggest that patients with presurgically negative NP-59 results should be treated medically and that noninvasive NP-59 SPECT/CT may be suited for use as the first lateralization modality after CT in patients with clinically confirmed PA.