Abstract

This study evaluated the feasibility of Tc-99m MIBI scintigraphy in the differential diagnosis of pelvic masses in female patients before operation. Seventy-one patients with pelvic masses were studied with planar imaging over the abdomen and pelvis 5, 15, 30, and 60 minutes after injection of 740 MBq (20 mCi) Tc-99m MIBI. The uptake of the masses was graded, and other abnormal signs, such as intestinal involvement, lymph node involvement, or peritoneal fluid collection, were also considered in image interpretation. An exploratory laparotomy was performed 3 days to 2 weeks after imaging. The scintigraphic diagnosis was compared with that of computed tomography (CT), CA-125 measurement, and pathologic analysis. Forty-one of 46 pelvic masses with no activity were proved benign. Eighteen of 25 with a fixed, focal uptake were malignant. In 19 of 23 masses, intestinal activity noted within 30 minutes was caused by metastases. All three cases with lymph node involvement and six cases with ascites were confirmed malignant. Combining focal uptake with intestinal involvement correctly indicated 22 of 23 malignant conditions before operation, whereas negative scans identified 41 of 48 benign lesions. Four of seven false-positive lesions had a higher cellular component. The diagnostic performance of Tc-99m MIBI is better than that of CT and CA-125 tests, because CT had eight false-positive and three false-negative results, whereas CA-125 had 12 false-positive and 3 false-negative results, respectively. Tc-99m MIBI is useful for differentiating benign and malignant pelvic masses in female patients. A fixed focal uptake or intestinal uptake of the radiotracer suggests malignancy, with diagnostic sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, and positive and negative predictive values of 95.6%, 85.4%, 88.7%, 75.9%, and 97.6%, respectively, in the current prospective study.

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