4.4 Article

Use of Ventilation-Perfusion Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography to Select the Target Lobe for Endobronchial Valve Lung Volume Reduction

Journal

RESPIRATION
Volume 100, Issue 9, Pages 886-897

Publisher

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000515336

Keywords

Bronchoscopic lung volume reduction; Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; Emphysema; Endobronchial valves; Bronchoscopy; Ventilation-perfusion scan; Single-photon emission computed tomography; Scintigraphy

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The study showed high concordance between VQDI and qCT in target lobe selection for EBV-LVR patients, and supported its value in treatment outcomes.
Background: Quantitative planar ventilation-perfusion (VQ) has a complementary role in target lobe selection for endobronchial valve lung volume reduction (EBV-LVR), especially in homogenous disease. We investigated a novel method of lung lobar quantitation using VQ single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) with computed tomography (CT) to generate a parameter called the ventilation-perfusion differential index (VQDI). Aim: The aim of this study was to validate VQDI as a parameter for target lobe selection in EBV-LVR against the gold standard test of quantitative computed tomography (qCT). Methods: This study was a prospective, multi-centre, single-blinded, observational study of EBV-LVR patients. Baseline and 3-month post intervention VQ SPECT and qCT were performed. The target lobe was chosen using qCT and planar VQ report (CTTL) whilst blinded to VQDI. Post EBV-LVR, our nuclear physician, blinded to CTTL, selected a target lobe using deidentified VQDI (VQDI(TL)). Inter-rater agreement between CTTL and VQDI(TL) was calculated by Kappa statistic. Treatment outcomes were analysed with a linear mixed-effects model. Results: There was a high concordance between CTTL and VQDI(TL) in 16 patients (89%, Kappa statistic = 0.85). Post EBV-LVR, our subjects showed significant changes in FEV1 (mean difference [MD] +150 mL, p < 0.001), target lobe volume reduction (MD -973 mL, p < 0.001), residual volume (MD -800 mL, p < 0.001), and St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire score (MD -11, p = 0.001). Improvements in 6-minute walk distances did not reach statistical significance. Conclusion: In this study of treatment responders, EBV-LVR target lobe selection using VQDI concurs with qCT and thus supports its value for this purpose. It complements qCT and may potentially be of synergistic value especially in homogenous emphysema.

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