Chang C P, Liu R S, Yu S M, Wynchank S, Chu L S, Shiau H Y, Cheng T C
Department of Nuclear Medicine, Taipei Veterans General Hospital, National Defense Medical Center, Taiwan, Republic of China.
Nucl Med Commun. 1996 Dec;17(12):1030-4. doi: 10.1097/00006231-199612000-00005.
The aims of this study were to assess whether 99Tcm-phytate can detect metastatic skeletal lesions, and to compare it with 99Tcm-methylene diphosphonate (99Tcm-MDP) and 99Tcm-labelled human serum albumin nanocolloids (99Tcm-NC). Twenty-four patients with multiple bony metastases, investigated by 99Tcm-MDP whole-body scintigraphy, underwent 99Tcm-phytate bone marrow imaging. A separate bone marrow scintigram with 99Tcm-NC was performed in 20 of the patients. All of the metastatic lesions detected on the 99Tcm-phytate scintigrams exhibited photon-abundant foci only. Most of the 99Tcm-phytate scintigrams detected fewer metastatic lesions than the corresponding bone scintigrams. Visual comparison of the 99Tcm-NC images showed that 13 of 20 99Tcm-NC images were superior to the 99Tcm-phytate images in the detection of metastatic involvement of the skeleton. Thus 99Tcm-phytate should not be used as a bone marrow imaging agent for the detection of skeletal metastases.