RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Radiation Dose and Prognosis of Ultra-Low-Dose Stress-First Myocardial Perfusion SPECT in Patients with Chest Pain Using a High-Efficiency Camera JF Journal of Nuclear Medicine JO J Nucl Med FD Society of Nuclear Medicine SP 545 OP 551 DO 10.2967/jnumed.114.150664 VO 56 IS 4 A1 Einstein, Andrew J. A1 Johnson, Lynne L. A1 DeLuca, Albert J. A1 Kontak, Andrew C. A1 Groves, Daniel W. A1 Stant, Jennifer A1 Pozniakoff, Ted A1 Cheng, Bin A1 Rabbani, LeRoy E. A1 Bokhari, Sabahat YR 2015 UL http://jnm.snmjournals.org/content/56/4/545.abstract AB Although SPECT myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) provides valuable information about patients with chest pain, there is growing concern regarding its radiation burden and lengthy duration. New high-efficiency (HE) cameras and stress-first protocols both offer the potential to markedly reduce radiation. No previous study has assessed outcomes and radiation doses of patients undergoing MPI on an HE-SPECT camera using an ultra-low-dose stress-first protocol. Methods: One hundred patients presenting to the emergency department with chest pain who were candidates for stress-first MPI underwent injection of approximately 185 MBq (5 mCi) of 99mTc-tetrofosmin at peak stress, followed by supine and prone imaging on an HE-SPECT camera. Same-day rest imaging was performed on patients with any abnormality on imaging after stress. Radiation effective dose was calculated from administered and residual activities. Patients were contacted 3 mo after discharge, and electronic records were accessed to evaluate the need for reevaluation for chest pain, additional imaging, or cardiac events. Results: Stress-only imaging was performed in 69 patients, for whom radiation effective dose averaged 0.99 mSv and study duration, 117 min. Radiation dose averaged 2.22 mSv over all patients. At 3 mo, 96 patients were free of major adverse cardiac events, repeat hospital chest pain evaluation, and repeat imaging or stress testing. One year after MPI and hospital discharge, all patients were living and without acute coronary syndrome. Conclusion: HE-SPECT stress-only imaging can be performed in more than two thirds of chest pain patients without a high pretest probability of a stress perfusion defect, with excellent prognosis, a radiation dose averaging 1 mSv, and a test duration of less than 2 h.