Title of article :
Labelling and Clinical Performance of Human Leukocytes Labelled with 99mTc-HMPAO Using Leukokit® with Gelofusine versus Leukokit® with HES as Sedimentation Agent
Author/Authors :
Auletta, S Department of Medical-Surgical Sciences and of Translational Medicine - Faculty of Medicine and Psychology - “Sapienza” University of Rome - Rome, Italy , Riolo, D Department of Medical-Surgical Sciences and of Translational Medicine - Faculty of Medicine and Psychology - “Sapienza” University of Rome - Rome, Italy , Varani, M Department of Medical-Surgical Sciences and of Translational Medicine - Faculty of Medicine and Psychology - “Sapienza” University of Rome - Rome, Italy , Lauri, C Department of Medical-Surgical Sciences and of Translational Medicine - Faculty of Medicine and Psychology - “Sapienza” University of Rome - Rome, Italy , Galli, F Department of Medical-Surgical Sciences and of Translational Medicine - Faculty of Medicine and Psychology - “Sapienza” University of Rome - Rome, Italy , Signore, A. Department of Medical-Surgical Sciences and of Translational Medicine - Faculty of Medicine and Psychology - “Sapienza” University of Rome - Rome, Italy
Abstract :
The scintigraphy with radiolabelled autologous leukocytes (WBCs) is considered the gold-standard technique for imaging infections. Leukokit®is a commercially available, disposable, sterile kit for labelling WBCs ex vivo. In this kit, WBCs isolation from
red blood cells (RBCs) was performed using poly(O-2-hydroxyethyl)starch (HES) as the RBCs sedimentation agent. Due to its
poor availability, HES has been recently replaced by Gelofusine as the RBC sedimentation agent. The aim of this study was to
compare the labelling efficiency and the diagnostic accuracy of WBCs labelled with Leukokit® with HES vs Leukokit® with
Gelofusine. WBCs were isolated using HES or Gelofusine for 45 minutes and then purified from platelets (PLTs) and labelled with
1.1 ± 0.3 GBq of freshly prepared 99mTc-HMPAO. The following parameters were evaluated: the number and type of recovered
WBCs, RBCs contamination, PLTs contamination, vitality of neutrophils, and chemotactic properties of neutrophils. Clinical
comparison was performed between 80 patients (33 males; age 67.5 ± 14.2) injected with 99mTc-HMPAO-WBCs, using HES as the
sedimentation agent, and 92 patients (38 males; age 68.2 ± 12.8) injected with 99mTc-HMPAO-WBCs using Gelofusine as the
sedimentation agent. Patients were affected by prosthetic joint infections, peripheral bone osteomyelitis, or vascular graft infection. We compared radiolabelling efficiency (LE), final recovery yield (RY), and diagnostic outcome based on microbiology or
2-year follow-up. Results showed that HES provides the lowest RBCs and PLTs contamination, but Gelofusine provides the
highest WBC recovery. Both agents did not in¢uence the chemotactic properties of WBCs, and no differences were found in terms
of LE and RY. Sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were also not significantly different for WBCs labelled with both agents
(diagnostic accuracy 90.9%, CI = 74.9–96.1 vs 98.3%, CI = 90.8–100, for HES and Gelofusine, respectively). In conclusion,
Gelofusine can be considered a suitable alternative of HES for WBCs separation and labelling.
Keywords :
99mTc-HMPAO , HES , Gelofusine , WBC , PLT
Journal title :
Contrast Media and Molecular Imaging