Cooke D A, Parkin A, Wiggins P, Robinson P J, Giles G R
Department of Diagnostic Imaging, St James's University Hospital, Leeds, UK.
Nucl Med Commun. 1987 Dec;8(12):970-2. doi: 10.1097/00006231-198712000-00004.
A total of 150 patients with primary carcinoma of the gastrointestinal tract had first-pass technetium colloid scintigraphy to estimate the hepatic perfusion index (HPI). Postoperative follow-up over 2-4 years shows that the HPI remains a sensitive method of detecting hepatic metastases, even in patients whose liver appeared normal at laparotomy. HPI was elevated in 94% of patients with liver metastases found at laparotomy; 87% of patients with occult metastases which became overt within 3 years of surgery had elevated HPI; and 91% of all patients who have to date developed hepatic metastases had elevated HPI at presentation. Of all patients with elevated HPI, 82% had metastases which were either apparent at surgery or became detectable by other means within 3 years.