UNLABELLED
This study investigated the clinical usefulness of evaluating the histologic grade of brain tumors by 201Tl SPECT brain imaging.
METHODS
Early and delayed SPECT brain images were obtained about 10 min and 3 h, respectively, after intravenous injection of 111MBq (3 mCi) 201Tl in 9 healthy subjects (control subjects), 3 patients with brain hematomas, and 41 patients with brain tumors. Semiquantitative data were obtained for early and delayed 201Tl uptake indices and 201Tl retained index in all patients and healthy subjects.
RESULTS
In 9 healthy subjects, there was little radioactivity in brain substance. In all patients with brain hematomas or tumors, a high tracer uptake was visible in lesions on early images, but the radioactivity in lesions varied with the histologic nature of the lesion on delayed images. The radioactivity decreased remarkably in brain hematomas (average retained index, 0.61 +/- 0.04). The radioactivity was stable or decreased slightly in benign or low-grade tumors (average retained index, 0.96 +/- 0.24). The radioactivity was increased in high-grade or metastatic tumors (average retained index, 1.26 +/- 0.28).
CONCLUSION
This study indicates that 201Tl brain SPECT early and delayed imaging is very useful in brain tumor localization, in distinguishing low-grade from high-grade brain tumors, in predicting histologic grades of brain tumors, and in detecting residual or recurrence of brain tumors postoperatively. 201Tl brain SPECT may also offer the most accurate assessment of response to therapy.