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KMID : 1035520230110040239
Brain Tumor Research and Treatment : BTRT
2023 Volume.11 No. 4 p.239 ~ p.245
Value of Thallium-201 SPECT and SPECT/CT Brain Imaging in Differentiating Malignant From Nonmalignant Lesions: A Comparative Case-Series Study With Pathologic and/or Clinical Correlation
Nicole Girlyn T. Pang

Julette Marie F. Batara
Lara Triccia C. Luistro
Christianne V. Mojica
Allan Jay C. Domingo
Abstract
Background : Thallium-201 single-photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography (SPECT/CT) brain scan is an imaging modality which can be done to differentiate between malignant and nonmalignant lesions among patients with nonconclusive findings on conventional neuroimaging. This study describes the results of thallium-201 SPECT/CT brain imaging and relate it to histopathologic and/or clinical findings and evaluate the value of thallium-201 SPECT/CT brain imaging in differentiating malignant from nonmalignant lesions.

Methods : This is a retrospective case series study of 10 patients with cerebral lesions who underwent thallium-201 SPECT/CT brain imaging in a hospital in the Philippines from 2010 to 2021.

Results : A total of 10 patients underwent thallium-201 SPECT/CT brain scan. Six had negative results while 4 had positive results. All of the patients who had positive results were found to have malignancy, whether recurrent or newly diagnosed. All of the patients with negative scan were found to have either an infectious and inflammatory disease and responded to treatment albeit in different degrees. Two of the 10 patients underwent biopsy whose results were consistent with the thallium-201 SPECT/CT brain scan results.

Conclusion : Thallium-201 brain scan combined with SPECT and SPECT/CT has been demonstrated to be useful in distinguishing malignant from nonmalignant lesions and is more cost-effective versus other imaging techniques. The findings in this study support the role of thallium scintigraphy in the diagnosis of patients with brain lesions most significantly when there is a need to differentiate between a malignant and benign condition.
KEYWORD
Thallium, Tomography, emission-computed, single-photon, Neuroimaging, Brain tumor, Malignancy
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