Evaluation of patients with painful total hip arthroplasty using combined single photon emission tomography and conventional computerized tomography (SPECT/CT) – a comparison of semi-quantitative versus 3D volumetric quantitative measurements

Abstract Background It was the primary purpose of our study to evaluate the inter- and intra-observer reliability of a standardized SPECT/CT algorithm for evaluating patients with painful primary total hip arthroplasty (THA). The secondary purpose was a comparison of semi-quantitative and 3D volumet...

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Main Authors: Emilienne Barthassat, Faik Afifi, Praveen Konala, Helmut Rasch, Michael T. Hirschmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-05-01
Series:BMC Medical Imaging
Subjects:
Hip
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12880-017-0204-x
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spelling doaj-7b21afb262484bedb946b29b40cb6e1c2020-11-24T21:06:14ZengBMCBMC Medical Imaging1471-23422017-05-011711910.1186/s12880-017-0204-xEvaluation of patients with painful total hip arthroplasty using combined single photon emission tomography and conventional computerized tomography (SPECT/CT) – a comparison of semi-quantitative versus 3D volumetric quantitative measurementsEmilienne Barthassat0Faik Afifi1Praveen Konala2Helmut Rasch3Michael T. Hirschmann4Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and TraumatologyDepartment of Orthopaedic Surgery and TraumatologyFellow- Musculoskeletal Radiology, The Robert Jones and Agnes Hunt Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Foundation TrustInstitute for Radiology and Nuclear MedicineDepartment of Orthopaedic Surgery and TraumatologyAbstract Background It was the primary purpose of our study to evaluate the inter- and intra-observer reliability of a standardized SPECT/CT algorithm for evaluating patients with painful primary total hip arthroplasty (THA). The secondary purpose was a comparison of semi-quantitative and 3D volumetric quantification method for assessment of bone tracer uptake (BTU) in those patients. Methods A novel SPECT/CT localization scheme consisting of 14 femoral and 4 acetabular regions on standardized axial and coronal slices was introduced and evaluated in terms of inter- and intra-observer reliability in 37 consecutive patients with hip pain after THA. BTU for each anatomical region was assessed semi-quantitatively using a color-coded Likert type scale (0-10) and volumetrically quantified using a validated software. Two observers interpreted the SPECT/CT findings in all patients two times with six weeks interval between interpretations in random order. Semi-quantitative and quantitative measurements were compared in terms of reliability. In addition, the values were correlated using Pearson`s correlation. A factorial cluster analysis of BTU was performed to identify clinically relevant regions, which should be grouped and analysed together. Results The localization scheme showed high inter- and intra-observer reliabilities for all femoral and acetabular regions independent of the measurement method used (semiquantitative versus 3D volumetric quantitative measurements). A high to moderate correlation between both measurement methods was shown for the distal femur, the proximal femur and the acetabular cup. The factorial cluster analysis showed that the anatomical regions might be summarized into three distinct anatomical regions. These were the proximal femur, the distal femur and the acetabular cup region. Conclusions The SPECT/CT algorithm for assessment of patients with pain after THA is highly reliable independent from the measurement method used. Three clinically relevant anatomical regions (proximal femoral, distal femoral, acetabular) were identified.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12880-017-0204-xHipSPECT/CTTotal hip arthroplastyTotal hip replacementPainLocalization scheme
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emilienne Barthassat
Faik Afifi
Praveen Konala
Helmut Rasch
Michael T. Hirschmann
spellingShingle Emilienne Barthassat
Faik Afifi
Praveen Konala
Helmut Rasch
Michael T. Hirschmann
Evaluation of patients with painful total hip arthroplasty using combined single photon emission tomography and conventional computerized tomography (SPECT/CT) – a comparison of semi-quantitative versus 3D volumetric quantitative measurements
BMC Medical Imaging
Hip
SPECT/CT
Total hip arthroplasty
Total hip replacement
Pain
Localization scheme
author_facet Emilienne Barthassat
Faik Afifi
Praveen Konala
Helmut Rasch
Michael T. Hirschmann
author_sort Emilienne Barthassat
title Evaluation of patients with painful total hip arthroplasty using combined single photon emission tomography and conventional computerized tomography (SPECT/CT) – a comparison of semi-quantitative versus 3D volumetric quantitative measurements
title_short Evaluation of patients with painful total hip arthroplasty using combined single photon emission tomography and conventional computerized tomography (SPECT/CT) – a comparison of semi-quantitative versus 3D volumetric quantitative measurements
title_full Evaluation of patients with painful total hip arthroplasty using combined single photon emission tomography and conventional computerized tomography (SPECT/CT) – a comparison of semi-quantitative versus 3D volumetric quantitative measurements
title_fullStr Evaluation of patients with painful total hip arthroplasty using combined single photon emission tomography and conventional computerized tomography (SPECT/CT) – a comparison of semi-quantitative versus 3D volumetric quantitative measurements
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of patients with painful total hip arthroplasty using combined single photon emission tomography and conventional computerized tomography (SPECT/CT) – a comparison of semi-quantitative versus 3D volumetric quantitative measurements
title_sort evaluation of patients with painful total hip arthroplasty using combined single photon emission tomography and conventional computerized tomography (spect/ct) – a comparison of semi-quantitative versus 3d volumetric quantitative measurements
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Imaging
issn 1471-2342
publishDate 2017-05-01
description Abstract Background It was the primary purpose of our study to evaluate the inter- and intra-observer reliability of a standardized SPECT/CT algorithm for evaluating patients with painful primary total hip arthroplasty (THA). The secondary purpose was a comparison of semi-quantitative and 3D volumetric quantification method for assessment of bone tracer uptake (BTU) in those patients. Methods A novel SPECT/CT localization scheme consisting of 14 femoral and 4 acetabular regions on standardized axial and coronal slices was introduced and evaluated in terms of inter- and intra-observer reliability in 37 consecutive patients with hip pain after THA. BTU for each anatomical region was assessed semi-quantitatively using a color-coded Likert type scale (0-10) and volumetrically quantified using a validated software. Two observers interpreted the SPECT/CT findings in all patients two times with six weeks interval between interpretations in random order. Semi-quantitative and quantitative measurements were compared in terms of reliability. In addition, the values were correlated using Pearson`s correlation. A factorial cluster analysis of BTU was performed to identify clinically relevant regions, which should be grouped and analysed together. Results The localization scheme showed high inter- and intra-observer reliabilities for all femoral and acetabular regions independent of the measurement method used (semiquantitative versus 3D volumetric quantitative measurements). A high to moderate correlation between both measurement methods was shown for the distal femur, the proximal femur and the acetabular cup. The factorial cluster analysis showed that the anatomical regions might be summarized into three distinct anatomical regions. These were the proximal femur, the distal femur and the acetabular cup region. Conclusions The SPECT/CT algorithm for assessment of patients with pain after THA is highly reliable independent from the measurement method used. Three clinically relevant anatomical regions (proximal femoral, distal femoral, acetabular) were identified.
topic Hip
SPECT/CT
Total hip arthroplasty
Total hip replacement
Pain
Localization scheme
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12880-017-0204-x
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