Abstract

Retrospective review of the additional clinical value provided by single photon emission computed tomography-computed tomography (SPECT/CT) in children and adolescents with back pain. A total of 207 consecutive paediatric patients (94 males, 113 females, age range 5-17 years, median age 14 years) were reviewed after referral to the spinal surgery clinic of a paediatric teaching hospital between November 2009 and February 2021. All patients had either only whole spine X-rays or whole spine x-rays and MRI, along with bone scan with planar whole-body images and SPECT/CT (with spot views of painful area). X-ray identified the pain generator in 23 of 177 (13.0%) cases. MRI identified the pain generator in 49 of 165 (29.7%) cases. SPECT/CT reported relevant positive findings which identified the pain generator in 107 of 185 (57.8%) cases. SPECT/CT changed patients' management in 72 of 185 (38.9%) cases. SPECT/CT was most effective at identifying the pain generator in cases of facet arthropathy, previous vertebral fracture and patients with previous deformity correction, where the pain generator was identified in 76.5% (13 of 17), 71.4% (5 of 7) and 63.4% (26 of 41) of cases, respectively. CT settings were adjusted to minimise the radiation burden (50 mAs/80kVp under 8 years, 24 mAs/110 kVp over 8 years). The role of SPECT/CT in diagnosing back pain is justified in selected paediatric patients, particularly with diagnostic uncertainty using conventional imaging. The CT component of the SPECT/CT study produced a lower radiation dose than conventional CT imaging, whilst producing bone images of diagnostic quality.

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