Kloiber Reinhard, Lafford Hans, Koslowsky Ingrid L, Tchajkov Ilja, Rabin Harvey R
Department of Radiology, Foothills Medical Centre, University of Calgary, 1403 29 Street NW, Calgary, AB, T2N 2T9, Canada.
Department of Medicine, Foothills Medical Centre, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.
Skeletal Radiol. 2024 Apr;53(4):741-752. doi: 10.1007/s00256-023-04474-6. Epub 2023 Oct 23.
F-fluorodeoxyglucose-PET/CT is the imaging modality of choice for the diagnosis of postoperative spine infection. Published interpretation criteria are variable and often incompletely described. The objective was to develop a practical and standardized approach.
Two-hundred-twenty-seven FDG-PET/CTs performed on 140 postoperative patients over a 7-year period were reviewed retrospectively. The presence or absence of infection was determined from clinical history, microbiology, other investigations, and clinical outcome during a minimum 6-month follow-up.
No activity attributable to normal healing was seen in the post-discectomy space or at the bone-hardware interface in the absence of a complication at any stage. Within the incision, activity from normal healing persisted for months. Wound infections were diagnosed clinically, and most had already been treated before FDG-PET/CT was done to assess deep structures. With proven infection, 95% of cases had activity in bone or soft tissue outside the surgical field. The remaining 5% had activity confined to the post-discectomy space. Sterile hardware loosening may cause elevated activity which remains confined to the bone/hardware interface. Pathogens are introduced directly at the time of surgery and may be avirulent resulting in indolent infection with low-grade activity. At the same time, activity from non-infectious causes can be intense. A semi-quantitative method using SUVmax performed poorly compared with assessment of the distribution of activity.
These observations have been incorporated into a checklist which is now being used at the time of interpretation. The potential sensitivity and specificity in the diagnosis of infection are close to 100%.
F-氟脱氧葡萄糖正电子发射断层扫描/计算机断层扫描(F-fluorodeoxyglucose-PET/CT)是诊断术后脊柱感染的首选成像方式。已发表的解读标准各不相同,且往往描述不完整。目的是制定一种实用且标准化的方法。
回顾性分析了7年间对140例术后患者进行的227次FDG-PET/CT检查。根据临床病史、微生物学、其他检查以及至少6个月随访期间的临床结果来确定是否存在感染。
在任何阶段无并发症的情况下,椎间盘切除术后间隙或骨-植入物界面均未见正常愈合所致的活性。在切口内,正常愈合的活性可持续数月。伤口感染通过临床诊断,大多数在进行FDG-PET/CT评估深部结构之前就已得到治疗。在已证实感染的病例中,95%在手术区域外的骨骼或软组织中有活性。其余5%的活性局限于椎间盘切除术后间隙。无菌性植入物松动可能导致活性升高,但仍局限于骨/植入物界面。病原体在手术时直接引入,可能无毒力,导致隐匿性感染且活性较低。与此同时,非感染性原因引起的活性可能很强。与评估活性分布相比,使用最大标准摄取值(SUVmax)的半定量方法表现不佳。
这些观察结果已纳入一份清单,目前在解读时使用。该方法在感染诊断中的潜在敏感性和特异性接近100%。