Abstract

BackgroundStatistical parametric mapping (SPM) procedure is an objective tool to analyze 18F-fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose-positron-emission tomography (FDG-PET) images and a useful complement to visual analysis. However, SPM requires a comparison to control data set that cannot be obtained in healthy children for ethical reasons. Using adults as controls showed some limitations. The purpose of the present study was to generate and validate a group of pseudo-normal children as a control group for FDG-PET studies in pediatrics.MethodsFDG-PET images of 47 children (mean ± SD age 10.2 ± 3.1 years) with refractory symptomatic (MRI-positive, n = 20) and cryptogenic (MRI-negative, n = 27) focal epilepsy planned for surgery were analyzed using visual and SPM analysis. Performances of SPM analysis were compared using two different control groups: (1) an adult control group consisting of healthy young adults (n = 25, 30.5 ± 5.8 years, adult PET template) and (2) a pediatric pseudo-control group consisting of patients (n = 24, 10.6 ± 3.1 years, children PET template) with refractory focal epilepsy but with negative MRI and with PET considered normal not only on visual analysis but also on SPM.ResultsAmong the 47 children, visual analysis succeeded detecting at least one hypometabolic area in 87% of the cases (interobserver kappa = 0.81). Regarding SPM analysis, the best compromise between sensitivity and specificity was obtained with a threshold of p less than 0.001 as an extent of more than 40 voxels. There was a significant concordance to detect hypometabolic areas between both SPM analyses [kappa (K) = 0.59; p < 0.005] and between both SPM and visual analyses (K = 0.45; p < 0.005), in symptomatic (K = 0.74; p < 0.005) as in cryptogenic patients (K = 0.26; p < 0.01). The pediatric pseudo-control group dramatically improved specificity (97% vs. 89%; p < 0.0001) by increasing the positive predictive value (86% vs. 65%). Sensitivity remained acceptable although it was not better (79% vs. 87%, p = 0.039). The main impact was to reduce by 41% the number of hypometabolic cortical artifacts detected by SPM, especially in the younger epileptic patients, which is a key point in clinical practice.ConclusionsThis age-matched pseudo-control group is a way to optimize SPM analysis of FDG-PET in children with epilepsy. It might also be considered for other brain pathologies in pediatrics in the future.

Highlights

  • Statistical parametric mapping (SPM) procedure is an objective tool to analyze 18F-fluoro-2-deoxy-Dglucose-positron-emission tomography (FDG-PET) images and a useful complement to visual analysis

  • Visual inspection of 18F-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucosepositron-emission tomography (FDG-PET) images is extensively used in pediatric clinical practice, but it remains subjective and depends on the expertise and experience of the observer

  • Based on FDG-PET in pediatric epilepsy, the present study proposes to generate and validate a pseudo-control group of pediatric patients for SPM studies in children

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Summary

Introduction

Statistical parametric mapping (SPM) procedure is an objective tool to analyze 18F-fluoro-2-deoxy-Dglucose-positron-emission tomography (FDG-PET) images and a useful complement to visual analysis. Findings are usually analyzed visually, and this is considered to carry powerful detecting value, it is highly variable according to the location (temporal/extratemporal) and type (positive/negative MRI) of epilepsy [9,10,11]. SPM proved to be a useful strategy for FDG-PET in adults with refractory focal epilepsy in temporal lobe cases [5,7,15,16,17,18,19], and in extratemporal epilepsy and/ or negative MRI, where sensitivity of visual analysis is lower [20]. In MRI-negative frontal lobe epilepsy patients, SPM sensitivity was equivalent or superior to visual analysis [20,21]. As a result SPM is more and more used as a complementary procedure to study focal epilepsy in adults

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