Background in 99tcm Dtp A renography evaluated by the impact of its components on individual kidney glomerular filtration rate

Summary Following injection for renography, 99Tcm-labelled diethylenetriamine-pentacetic acid (DTPA) rapidly enters the extravascular space. Background therefore comprises two components, a falling intravascular signal and an extravascular signal which initially rises. We estimated the relative magnitudes of these two components in terms of their impact on the calculation of differential renal function and individual kidney glomerular filtration rate (IKGFR) from the second phase of the 99Tcm-labelled DTPA renogram in 56 paediatric kidneys. We expressed each of the two background signals as a GFR equivalent. The GFR equivalent of the intravascular signal recorded from a peri-renal background region of interest (ROI), scaled by a factor equal to the ratio of the pixel numbers in the renal and background ROIs, was −39 (S.D. 14) ml min−1. The GFR equivalent of the extravascular signal was smaller than this and opposite to it at 23 (S.D. 10) ml min−1, giving a median ratio for the two equivalents of −1.68. Because of the opposing effects of the two background components on the second phase of the renogram, techniques recently described for the quantification of IKGFR from the renogram, and which eliminate the intravascular component, offer no theoretical advantage over a method of analysis which uses ‘direct’ subtraction of the total background signal. In practice, however, these new techniques are superior in their handling of ‘noisy’ data, consistently giving a lower coefficient of variation in their estimation of IKGFR.