Dopamine transporter (DAT) imaging using single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and (123)I-labelled radiopharmaceuticals like [(123)I]FP-CIT is an established part in the diagnostic work-up of parkinsonism. Guidelines recommend attenuation correction (AC), either by a calculated uniform attenuation matrix (calAC) or by a measured attenuation map (nowadays done by low-dose CT; CTAC). We explored the impact of CTAC compared to conventional calAC on diagnostic accuracy and the use of DAT availability as a biomarker of nigrostriatal integrity.Integrated SPECT/CT studies with [(123)I]FP-CIT were performed in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD; n = 15) and essential tremor (ET; n = 15). SPECT data was reconstructed with calAC, CTAC and without AC (noAC). Regional DAT availability was assessed by uniform volume-of-interest analyses providing striatal binding potential (BP ND) estimates. BP ND values were compared among methods and correlated with clinical parameters. Compared to calAC, both CTAC and noAC provided significantly lower, but highly linearly correlated BP ND estimates (R (2) = 0.96). Diagnostic performance to distinguish between patients with PD and those with ET was very high and did not differ between AC methods. CTAC and noAC data tended so show a stronger correlation with severity and duration of disease in PD and age in ET than did calAC. Defining the reference region on low-dose CT instead of SPECT did not consistently alter findings. [(123)I]FP-CIT SPECT provides a very high diagnostic accuracy for differentiation between PD and ET that is not dependent on the employed AC method. Preliminary correlations analyses suggest that BP ND estimates derived from CTAC represent a superior biomarker of nigrostriatal integrity.
Keywords: FP-CIT; Parkinson’s disease; Single-photon emission computed tomography; attenuation correction; dopamine transporter; essential tremor.