EJNMMI Research (Sep 2024)

Quantitation of mitral regurgitation using positron emission tomography

  • Jonathan Sigfridsson,
  • Tomasz Baron,
  • Johannes Bergsten,
  • Hendrik J. Harms,
  • Jonny Nordström,
  • Tanja Kero,
  • Patrik Svanström,
  • Elin Lindström,
  • Lieuwe Appel,
  • My Jonasson,
  • Mark Lubberink,
  • Frank A. Flachskampf,
  • Jens Sörensen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13550-024-01150-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Background Cardiac positron emission tomography (PET) offers non-invasive assessment of perfusion and left ventricular (LV) function from a single dynamic scan. However, no prior assessment of mitral regurgitation severity by PET has been presented. Application of indicator dilution techniques and gated image analyses to PET data enables calculation of forward stroke volume and total LV stroke volume. We aimed to evaluate a combination of these methods for measurement of regurgitant volume (RegVol) and fraction (RegF) using dynamic 15O-water and 11C-acetate PET in comparison to cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR). Results Twenty-one patients with severe primary mitral valve regurgitation underwent same-day dynamic PET examinations (15O-water and 11C-acetate) and CMR. PET data were reconstructed into dynamic series with short time frames during the first pass, gated 15O-water blood pool images, and gated 11C-acetate myocardial uptake images. PET-based RegVol and RegF correlated strongly with CMR (RegVol: 15O-water r = 0.94, 11C-acetate r = 0.91 and RegF: 15O-water r = 0.88, 11C-acetate r = 0.84, p 30mL) was 95% for 15O-water and 92% for 11C-acetate. Conclusions LV regurgitation severity quantified using cardiac PET correlated with CMR and showed high accuracy for discriminating patients from healthy volunteers.

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