Scandinavian journal of gastroenterology
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Scand. J. Gastroenterol. · Dec 1992
Do technetium-99m hexamethylpropylene amine oxime-labeled leukocytes truly reflect the mucosal inflammation in patients with ulcerative colitis?
Twenty-five patients with ulcerative colitis and nine controls with macroscopically non-inflamed colon were investigated with technetium-99m hexamethylpropylene amine oxime-labeled leukocyte scintigraphy and colonoscopy with biopsies. The interval between leukocyte scintigraphy and colonoscopy was < or = 14 days in all patients with ulcerative colitis and < or = 30 days in eight of nine controls. Scintigrams were obtained at approximately 45 min and 4 h after injection of labeled leukocytes. ⋯ By means of kappa statistics, the inter-observer agreement between scintigraphic grading at 45 min and endoscopy was, for all subjects, 0.32 (95% confidence interval (CI), 0.20-0.44; p < 0.001) and, for patients with ulcerative colitis, 0.19 (CI, 0.07-0.31; p < 0.001). When 17 patients who had complete colonoscopies were divided into those with total, extensive, or distal colitis, leukocyte scintigraphy underestimated the extension of active inflammation. A simple scintigraphic scoring system reflects the colonic inflammation viewed endoscopically and histologically in patients with ulcerative colitis but underestimates the presence of active inflammation in individual colonic segments.