Contribution of thallium-201-SPECT to the grading of tumorous alterations of the brain |
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Authors: | Rüdiger Burkard Klaus Peter Kaiser Helmut Wieler Peter Klawki Axel Linkamp Lutz Mittelbach Thomas Göller |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Nuclear Medicine of the Central Hospital of the armed forces in Koblenz ( Bundeswehrzentralkrankenhaus Koblenz ), Academic Teaching Hospital of the Johannes-Gutenberg-University Mainz, Germany;(2) Department of Neurosurgery of the Central Hospital of the armed forces in Koblenz ( Bundeswehrzentralkrankenhaus Koblenz ), Academic Teaching Hospital of the Johannes-Gutenberg-University Mainz, Germany;(3) Department of Internal Medicine of the Central Hospital of the armed forces in Koblenz ( Bundeswehrzentralkrankenhaus Koblenz ), Academic Teaching Hospital of the Johannes-Gutenberg-University Mainz, Germany;(4) Department of Neurology and Psychiatry of the Central Hospital of the armed forces in Koblenz ( Bundeswehrzentralkrankenhaus Koblenz ), Academic Teaching Hospital of the Johannes-Gutenberg-University Mainz, Germany;(5) Department of Pathology of the Central Hospital of the armed forces in Koblenz ( Bundeswehrzentralkrankenhaus Koblenz ), Academic Teaching Hospital of the Johannes-Gutenberg-University Mainz, Germany |
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Abstract: | ![]() Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) with thallium-201-chloride (201TI) was used in 22 patients to assess the grade of malignancy of brain tumors.Low- and high-grade malignant gliomas could be well differentiated by calculating the Grade Index (GI), i.e., 201TI uptake in the tumor area relative to a contralateral brain region. Low-grade gliomas (WHO-grade I–II) usually showed a GI of <1.5. Tumors classified histologically as high-grade malignant (WHO-grade III–IV) had GI values greater than 1.42 and a mean value of 1.89.Until labelled amino-acid tracers for gamma-cameras become commercially available, thallium-201 brain-SPECT can provide an independent and complementary method to CT/MRI for the differential diagnosis of grading of brain tumors. This simple technique can help to reduce sampling errors during needle biopsies of brain tumors, particularly of high-grade lesions incorrectly graded as low-grade tumors due to inadequate biopsy material. In addition, pre- and post-therapy studies can influence the strategy of therapy itself and allow an early detection of recurrences. |
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Keywords: | Brain tumors grading thallium-201-SPECT |
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