RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 False negative scans in parathyroid scintigraphy – Factors involved and its implications in the era of minimally invasive parathyroidectomy JF Journal of Nuclear Medicine JO J Nucl Med FD Society of Nuclear Medicine SP 244P OP 244P VO 49 IS supplement 1 A1 Chamarthy, Murthy A1 Owen, Randall A1 Chun, Kwang A1 Moadel, Renee A1 Shah, Maulik A1 Freeman, Leonard YR 2008 UL http://jnm.snmjournals.org/content/49/supplement_1/244P.2.abstract AB 1046 Objectives: Parathyroid imaging helps to localize the abnormal gland pre-operatively and plays a significant role to guide minimally invasive parathyroidectomy. This study aims to analyze false negative scans that can complicate surgical procedure and outcome. Methods: 139 patients who had parathyroid scans and subsequent parathyroidectomy were analyzed retrospectively. Of these, 133 patients had primary hyperparathyroidism. Weights, pre-op PTH and calcium of the missed glands(FN cases) were compared to the correctly identified glands(TP cases) using regression analysis. Cure rate(response in calcium <10.6 and PTH <65 after surgery) and surgical approach were taken into account to understand how scintigraphy impacts the surgical management. Results: The sensitivity, specificity, PPV and NPV for adenoma were 85%, 50%, 99% and 5% respectively. Mean gland weight of the FN cases(451mg,n= 24) on parathyroid scan was significantly lower (p=0.005) than TP cases (1283mg,n= 109). There was no significant difference in mean PTH (p=0.3)and calcium (p=0.5)values among FN and TP groups. There was a significant difference in occurrence of bilateral exploration (FN:17/24,70%; TP:16/109,14%,p=0.01) without any significant difference in the cure rates (FN:83%, TP:75%,p=0.3). Conclusions: In our experience, gland weight is significantly associated with correct localization and a parathyroid scan might miss low weight lesions (n=24,18%). PTH and calcium cannot be used to select which patients should undergo pre-operative scintigraphic localization. The consequences of missing a lesion on parathyroid scan did not affect cure rate because of intra-op PTH monitoring. Rather, it affected the surgical technique and the rate at which minimally invasive procedures were performed.