Abstract

These guidelines update the previous EANM 2009 guidelines on the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism (PE). Relevant new aspects are related to (a) quantification of PE and other ventilation/perfusion defects; (b) follow-up of patients with PE; (c) chronic PE; and (d) description of additional pulmonary physiological changes leading to diagnoses of left ventricular heart failure (HF), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and pneumonia. The diagnosis of PE should be reported when a mismatch of one segment or two subsegments is found. For ventilation, Technegas or krypton gas is preferred over diethylene triamine pentaacetic acid (DTPA) in patients with COPD. Tomographic imaging with V/PSPECT has higher sensitivity and specificity for PE compared with planar imaging. Absence of contraindications makes V/PSPECT an essential method for the diagnosis of PE. When V/PSPECT is combined with a low-dose CT, the specificity of the test can be further improved, especially in patients with other lung diseases. Pitfalls in V/PSPECT interpretation are discussed. In conclusion, V/PSPECT is strongly recommended as it accurately establishes the diagnosis of PE even in the presence of diseases like COPD, HF and pneumonia and has no contraindications.

Highlights

  • These guidelines update the 2009 European Association of Nuclear Medicine (EANM) guidelines on the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism (PE) [1, 2] for ventilation/ perfusion single-photon emission tomography (V/PSPECT)

  • Since the previous EANM guidelines, little new data has emerged with regard to the technical aspects of V/PSPECT

  • Injection of no more than 100,000–200,000 particles is recommended for patients with known pulmonary hypertension, right-to-left heart shunt, pneumonectomy or after single lung transplantation

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Summary

Introduction

These guidelines update the 2009 EANM guidelines on the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism (PE) [1, 2] for ventilation/ perfusion single-photon emission tomography (V/PSPECT). Injection of no more than 100,000–200,000 particles is recommended for patients with known pulmonary hypertension, right-to-left heart shunt, pneumonectomy or after single lung transplantation. Applying these principles of interpretation, recent V/PSPECT studies amounting to over 5000 cases report a negative predictive value of 97–99%, sensitivities of 96–99% and specificities of 96–98% for PE diagnosis.

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