Archer Hilary A, Smailagic Nadja, John Christeena, Holmes Robin B, Takwoingi Yemisi, Coulthard Elizabeth J, Cullum Sarah
Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Bristol, Learning and Research Building, Southmead Hospital, Bristol, UK, BS10 5NB.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Jun 23;2015(6):CD010896. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD010896.pub2.
In the UK, dementia affects 5% of the population aged over 65 years and 25% of those over 85 years. Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) represents one subtype and is thought to account for up to 16% of all degenerative dementias. Although the core of the diagnostic process in dementia rests firmly on clinical and cognitive assessments, a wide range of investigations are available to aid diagnosis.Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) is an established clinical tool that uses an intravenously injected radiolabelled tracer to map blood flow in the brain. In FTD the characteristic pattern seen is hypoperfusion of the frontal and anterior temporal lobes. This pattern of blood flow is different to patterns seen in other subtypes of dementia and so can be used to differentiate FTD.It has been proposed that a diagnosis of FTD, (particularly early stage), should be made not only on the basis of clinical criteria but using a combination of other diagnostic findings, including rCBF SPECT. However, more extensive testing comes at a financial cost, and with a potential risk to patient safety and comfort.
To determine the diagnostic accuracy of rCBF SPECT for diagnosing FTD in populations with suspected dementia in secondary/tertiary healthcare settings and in the differential diagnosis of FTD from other dementia subtypes.
Our search strategy used two concepts: (a) the index test and (b) the condition of interest. We searched citation databases, including MEDLINE (Ovid SP), EMBASE (Ovid SP), BIOSIS (Ovid SP), Web of Science Core Collection (ISI Web of Science), PsycINFO (Ovid SP), CINAHL (EBSCOhost) and LILACS (Bireme), using structured search strategies appropriate for each database. In addition we searched specialised sources of diagnostic test accuracy studies and reviews including: MEDION (Universities of Maastricht and Leuven), DARE (Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects) and HTA (Health Technology Assessment) database.We requested a search of the Cochrane Register of Diagnostic Test Accuracy Studies and used the related articles feature in PubMed to search for additional studies. We tracked key studies in citation databases such as Science Citation Index and Scopus to ascertain any further relevant studies. We identified 'grey' literature, mainly in the form of conference abstracts, through the Web of Science Core Collection, including Conference Proceedings Citation Index and Embase. The most recent search for this review was run on the 1 June 2013.Following title and abstract screening of the search results, full-text papers were obtained for each potentially eligible study. These papers were then independently evaluated for inclusion or exclusion.
We included both case-control and cohort (delayed verification of diagnosis) studies. Where studies used a case-control design we included all participants who had a clinical diagnosis of FTD or other dementia subtype using standard clinical diagnostic criteria. For cohort studies, we included studies where all participants with suspected dementia were administered rCBF SPECT at baseline. We excluded studies of participants from selected populations (e.g. post-stroke) and studies of participants with a secondary cause of cognitive impairment.
Two review authors extracted information on study characteristics and data for the assessment of methodological quality and the investigation of heterogeneity. We assessed the methodological quality of each study using the QUADAS-2 (Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies) tool. We produced a narrative summary describing numbers of studies that were found to have high/low/unclear risk of bias as well as concerns regarding applicability. To produce 2 x 2 tables, we dichotomised the rCBF SPECT results (scan positive or negative for FTD) and cross-tabulated them against the results for the reference standard. These tables were then used to calculate the sensitivity and specificity of the index test. Meta-analysis was not performed due to the considerable between-study variation in clinical and methodological characteristics.
Eleven studies (1117 participants) met our inclusion criteria. These consisted of six case-control studies, two retrospective cohort studies and three prospective cohort studies. Three studies used single-headed camera SPECT while the remaining eight used multiple-headed camera SPECT. Study design and methods varied widely. Overall, participant selection was not well described and the studies were judged as having either high or unclear risk of bias. Often the threshold used to define a positive SPECT result was not predefined and the results were reported with knowledge of the reference standard. Concerns regarding applicability of the studies to the review question were generally low across all three domains (participant selection, index test and reference standard).Sensitivities and specificities for differentiating FTD from non-FTD ranged from 0.73 to 1.00 and from 0.80 to 1.00, respectively, for the three multiple-headed camera studies. Sensitivities were lower for the two single-headed camera studies; one reported a sensitivity and specificity of 0.40 (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.05 to 0.85) and 0.95 (95% CI 0.90 to 0.98), respectively, and the other a sensitivity and specificity of 0.36 (95% CI 0.24 to 0.50) and 0.92 (95% CI 0.88 to 0.95), respectively.Eight of the 11 studies which used SPECT to differentiate FTD from Alzheimer's disease used multiple-headed camera SPECT. Of these studies, five used a case-control design and reported sensitivities of between 0.52 and 1.00, and specificities of between 0.41 and 0.86. The remaining three studies used a cohort design and reported sensitivities of between 0.73 and 1.00, and specificities of between 0.94 and 1.00. The three studies that used single-headed camera SPECT reported sensitivities of between 0.40 and 0.80, and specificities of between 0.61 and 0.97.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: At present, we would not recommend the routine use of rCBF SPECT in clinical practice because there is insufficient evidence from the available literature to support this.Further research into the use of rCBF SPECT for differentiating FTD from other dementias is required. In particular, protocols should be standardised, study populations should be well described, the threshold for 'abnormal' scans predefined and clear details given on how scans are analysed. More prospective cohort studies that verify the presence or absence of FTD during a period of follow up should be undertaken.
在英国,痴呆症影响着5%的65岁以上人群以及25%的85岁以上人群。额颞叶痴呆(FTD)是其中一种亚型,被认为占所有退行性痴呆的16%。尽管痴呆症诊断过程的核心主要基于临床和认知评估,但仍有多种检查手段可辅助诊断。局部脑血流量(rCBF)单光子发射计算机断层扫描(SPECT)是一种成熟的临床工具,它通过静脉注射放射性标记示踪剂来描绘大脑中的血流情况。在FTD中,典型的血流模式是额叶和颞叶前部灌注不足。这种血流模式与其他痴呆亚型不同,因此可用于鉴别FTD。有人提出,FTD的诊断(尤其是早期)不仅应基于临床标准,还应结合其他诊断结果,包括rCBF SPECT。然而,更广泛的检测会产生经济成本,并且对患者安全和舒适度存在潜在风险。
确定在二级/三级医疗保健机构中,rCBF SPECT对疑似痴呆人群诊断FTD的准确性,以及在FTD与其他痴呆亚型的鉴别诊断中的准确性。
我们的检索策略使用了两个概念:(a)索引测试和(b)感兴趣的疾病。我们使用适合每个数据库的结构化检索策略,检索了多个引文数据库,包括MEDLINE(Ovid SP)、EMBASE(Ovid SP)、BIOSIS(Ovid SP)、科学引文索引核心合集(ISI Web of Science)、PsycINFO(Ovid SP)、CINAHL(EBSCOhost)和LILACS(Bireme)。此外,我们还检索了诊断测试准确性研究和综述的专门来源,包括:MEDION(马斯特里赫特大学和鲁汶大学)、DARE(循证医学数据库)和HTA(卫生技术评估)数据库。我们要求检索Cochrane诊断测试准确性研究注册库,并使用PubMed中的相关文章功能检索其他研究。我们在科学引文索引和Scopus等引文数据库中追踪关键研究,以确定任何进一步的相关研究。我们通过科学引文索引核心合集(包括会议论文引文索引和Embase)识别“灰色”文献,主要形式为会议摘要。本综述的最新检索于2013年6月1日进行。在对检索结果进行标题和摘要筛选后,为每个潜在合格研究获取了全文论文。然后对这些论文进行独立评估,以确定是否纳入。
我们纳入了病例对照研究和队列研究(延迟诊断验证)。对于使用病例对照设计的研究,我们纳入了所有根据标准临床诊断标准临床诊断为FTD或其他痴呆亚型的参与者。对于队列研究,我们纳入了所有疑似痴呆的参与者在基线时接受rCBF SPECT检查的研究。我们排除了来自特定人群(如中风后)的参与者研究以及有认知障碍继发原因的参与者研究。
两位综述作者提取了关于研究特征的信息以及用于评估方法学质量和异质性调查的数据。我们使用QUADAS - 2(诊断准确性研究质量评估)工具评估每项研究的方法学质量。我们进行了叙述性总结,描述了被发现具有高/低/不明确偏倚风险的研究数量以及关于适用性的问题。为了生成2×2表格,我们将rCBF SPECT结果二分法(FTD扫描阳性或阴性),并将其与参考标准的结果进行交叉制表。然后使用这些表格计算索引测试的敏感性和特异性。由于临床和方法学特征在研究之间存在相当大的差异,因此未进行荟萃分析。
11项研究(1117名参与者)符合我们的纳入标准。其中包括6项病例对照研究、2项回顾性队列研究和3项前瞻性队列研究。3项研究使用单探头相机SPECT,其余8项使用多探头相机SPECT。研究设计和方法差异很大。总体而言,参与者选择描述不佳,研究被判定具有高或不明确的偏倚风险。通常,用于定义SPECT阳性结果的阈值未预先定义,并且结果是在已知参考标准的情况下报告的。在所有三个领域(参与者选择、索引测试和参考标准)中,关于研究对综述问题适用性的担忧普遍较低。对于三项多探头相机研究,区分FTD与非FTD的敏感性范围为0.73至1.00,特异性范围为0.80至1.00。两项单探头相机研究的敏感性较低;一项报告的敏感性和特异性分别为0.40(95%置信区间(CI)0.05至0.85)和0.95(95%CI 0.90至0.98),另一项报告的敏感性和特异性分别为0.36(95%CI 0.24至0.50)和0.92(95%CI 0.88至0.95)。11项使用SPECT区分FTD与阿尔茨海默病的研究中有8项使用多探头相机SPECT。在这些研究中,5项使用病例对照设计,报告的敏感性在0.52至1.00之间;特异性在0.41至0.86之间。其余3项研究使用队列设计,报告的敏感性在0.73至1.00之间;特异性在0.94至1.00之间。三项使用单探头相机SPECT的研究报告的敏感性在0.40至0.80之间,特异性在0.61至0.97之间。
目前,我们不建议在临床实践中常规使用rCBF SPECT,因为现有文献中没有足够的证据支持这一点。需要进一步研究rCBF SPECT在区分FTD与其他痴呆症方面的应用。特别是,方案应标准化,研究人群应详细描述,“异常”扫描的阈值应预先定义,并应给出关于扫描分析方式的明确细节。应开展更多的前瞻性队列研究,在随访期间验证FTD的存在与否。