Purpose: To identify the non-neoplastic variants of the sternal uptake in patients known to have a primary tumor, referred for detection of metastases elsewhere.
Materials and methods: This retrospective study was approved by the Institutional Review Board. Fifty eligible patients (17 males & 33 females) known to have a primary tumor underwent 99mTc- MDP-bone scan for detection of metastases. All patients underwent SPECT/CT of the chest region. For each patient, 10 subsites were evaluated (right & left sternoclavicular joints, right and left first costo-sternal articulation, manubrium sterni, manubriosternal junction, body of the sternum, xiphisternal junction, xiphoid process and other sub-sites (e.g. chondro-sternal articulations)). The uptake was described as normal or abnormal. CT findings were categorized as normal/abnor- mal (arthritis, degenerative, developmental & congenital). Any patient with suspicious metastatic sternal lesion based on CT findings or abnormal tracer uptake was excluded.
Results: A total of 500 sub-sites were analyzed. Increased uptake was seen in 189 sub-sites. Of them, 133 showed abnormal CT findings (95 arthritis, 33 degenerative, 3 developmental & 2 con- genital) and 56 sites were unremarkable. Of the 311 with normal uptake, only 18 showed abnormal CT findings (8 arthritis & 10 degenerative). The association was statistically significant (P < 0.001). Conclusion: Increased sternal uptake is significantly associated with CT structural abnormalities and knowledge of these non-neoplastic variants is essential for correct interpretation of SPECT/ CT bone scans especially in patients with known cancers.
Research Member
          
      Research Department
              
          Research Year
              2016
          Research Journal
              The Egyptian Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine
          Research Publisher
              ScienceDirect
          Research Vol
              47-2
          Research Rank
              1
          Research_Pages
              439-443
          Research Website
              http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378603X16300067
          Research Abstract
               
          