Background: SPECT Myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) is associated with a relatively high radiation burden and decreasing image quality in heavy patients. Patient-specific low-activity protocols (PLAPs) are suggested but follow-up data is lacking. Our aim was to compare the use of a standard fixed-activity protocol (FAP) with a PLAP in cadmium zinc telluride (CZT)-SPECT MPI.
Methods: We retrospectively included 1255 consecutive patients who underwent CZT-SPECT stress-optional rest MPI. 668 Patients were scanned using FAP (370 MBq) and 587 patients using PLAP (2.25 MBq·kg-1). Percentage of scans interpreted as normal, radiation dose, and 1-year follow-up including hard event rates (all-cause death or non-fatal myocardial infarction) were collected and compared.
Results: The percentage of scans interpreted as normal was 67% in FAP and 70% in PLAP groups (P = .29). The annualized hard event rates in these patients were 1.0% in the FAP and 0.9% in the PLAP group (P = .86). However, the mean radiation dose decreased by 23% for stress-only and by 15% to 2.6 mSv for stress-optional rest MPI after introduction of the PLAP (p<0.001).
Conclusions: Introduction of a patient-specific low-activity protocol does not affect the percentage of scans interpreted as normal or prognosis but significantly lowers the radiation dose for CZT-SPECT MPI.
Keywords: CdZnTe; High-efficiency camera; Radiation dose reduction; myocardial perfusion imaging: SPECT; stress-only.