Abstract
The first cardiac images were produced using a rectilinear scanner but further advances were made with the development of more suitable radioactive tracers and more sophisticated imaging equipment. The invention of the Anger’s gamma camera in 1957 opened the door for rapid development, initially with blood pool imaging, progressing to myocardial imaging, cardiac PET, and the multi-faceted discipline that is now an essential part of clinical cardiology. This chapter will summarise the History of Nuclear Cardiology in the UK.
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Keywords
- Nuclear Cardiology
- Myocardial Perfusion Scintigraphy
- Radionuclide Ventriculography
- Technology Appraisal
- Ganglionated Plexi
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.
8.1 Historical Perspective
The potential of radionuclides as tracers for the investigation of the circulation was realised many years ago but early experiments were hampered by primitive equipment. Blumgart and colleagues reported the first use of a radionuclide tracer in man in 1927. They used a cloud chamber to measure the transit time of intravenous radium C from one arm to the other and they noted much longer circulation times in patients with heart failure. In the late 1940s Prinzmetal and colleagues established the use of precordial time-activity curves following intravenous injection of a bolus of radionuclide. They used sodium-24 and a Geiger-Müller tube, but the technique was developed using iodine-131 and a more reliable scintillation counter by Shipley and colleagues, and was used by Huff and colleagues in conjunction with the Hamilton equation to measure cardiac output.
The first cardiac images were produced using a rectilinear scanner but further advances were made with the development of more suitable radioactive tracers and more sophisticated imaging equipment. In 1957 Anger’s invention of the gamma camera opened the door for rapid development, initially with blood pool imaging, progressing to myocardial imaging, cardiac PET, and the multi-faceted discipline that is now an essential part of clinical cardiology (Table 8.1).
Along the way, UK-based researchers and clinicians have made significant contributions. Groups based in Aberdeen (cardiac PET), Northwick Park Hospital (technetium-based perfusion tracers), St Bartholomew’s Hospital (first pass blood pool imaging), Hammersmith Hospital (cardiac PET), University College Hospitals (ECG-gated SPECT, rubidium-82, solid state cameras), Manchester Royal Infirmary (rubidium-82) and Royal Brompton & Harefield Hospitals (pharmacological stress, heart failure, cost-effectiveness) have all influenced the field internationally. The BNMS can be proud of the achievements of its members.
8.2 Radionuclide Ventriculography
In the late 1970s and early 1980s radionuclide ventriculography (RNV) was the main nuclear cardiology technique and it was used increasingly as an accurate and reproducible method of assessing left ventricular (LV) function. Although equilibrium imaging was most commonly used, first pass imaging had particular advantages for assessing right ventricular function and intra-cardiac shunting, as successfully used by the paediatric cardiologists at Guy’s Hospital [1]. Parametric imaging provided simple methods of visualising regional function from the phase and amplitude images [2]. The Institute of Nuclear Medicine under the guidance of Peter Ell at the Middlesex Hospital demonstrated the value of such functional imaging in clinical practice (Fig. 8.1), and the phase image in particular continues to be of interest in assessing ventricular dysynchrony before resynchronisation pacing in patients with heart failure. This group also pioneered gated blood pool tomography [3] but with only two 100 ms frames per cardiac cycle it was not until image acquisition and processing techniques improved that it became a realistic technique as used today.
The simplicity and reproducibility of RNV meant that it was the technique of choice for serial assessments of LV function in patients having cardiotoxic chemotherapy or after heart transplantation but the increasing availability of echocardiography and its lack of ionising radiation led to it effectively replacing RNV. The availability of accurate methods of assessing LV function from gated myocardial SPECT led to a further decline, although RNV remains a valuable technique when echocardiography or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are not possible.
8.3 Myocardial Perfusion Scintigraphy
As RNV was becoming less popular, so the combined assessment of myocardial viability and perfusion using thallium-201 and technetium-99m MIBI and tetrofosmin developed. Myocardial perfusion scintigraphy (MPS) is now the dominant nuclear cardiology technique that should be available to all cardiac services although appropriate expertise is not always available and there are still UK sites that rely on other techniques for coronary functional imaging. Planar MPS was effectively replaced by SPECT in the 1980s and it has developed from a diagnostic technique to a method of assessing prognosis and hence guiding clinical management and improving clinical outcome in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). MPS SPECT has also become an alternative to FDG PET in assessing patients with ischaemic LV dysfunction and possible hibernating myocardium (Fig. 8.2) [4].
When the technetium-99m labelled perfusion tracers, MIBI and tetrofosmin were introduced in the 1990s many sites switched entirely to these despite some of their disadvantages [5]. Apart from commercial marketing, one driver for the change was the lower radiation burden of the technetium tracers. However, several recalculations have almost equalised the effective doses at 6, 7 and 8 mSv for 1000 MBq of tetrofosmin, MIBI and 80 MBq of thallium respectively [6]. With this new information and the superior uptake characteristics for the quantification of perfusion in absolute terms using dynamic SPECT, thallium MPS may yet see a resurgence.
8.4 Pharmacological stress
One of the strengths of MPS is that it is not necessary for the patient to exercise maximally and pharmacological stress of myocardial perfusion became particularly prevalent in the UK in the 1980s and beyond, such that it is now used in the majority of studies instead of dynamic exercise. The coronary vasodilator dipyridamole was initially used following validation work by Gould in dogs and it is still the commonest pharmacological stressor in countries such as France, primarily because it is cheap. The Royal Brompton group was among the first to combine it with dynamic exercise in order to improve image quality and reduce side effects [7]. They later extended this to adenosine stress [8], which effectively replaced dipyridamole in the UK because of its shorter half-life and hence safety and practicality. They were also the first group in Europe to use the more specific A2a adenosine receptor agonist, regadenoson [9], which extended the options for stressing patients with obstructive airways disease and potentially also those with conducting tissue disease.
8.5 NICE and the UK Societies
As the NICE programme of clinical guidelines and technology appraisals grew in the 1990s it was apparent that the focus of healthcare providers was moving from evidence of effectiveness to cost-effectiveness to clinical outcomes. At this stage there were only computer-based estimates of cost effectiveness with no supporting clinical studies. However, in 1999 clinical cost-effectiveness studies from the UK [10] and USA [11] provided strong support for MPS at a time when there was no similar evidence to support alternatives. The data were considered by NICE and formed part of the evidence for the first technology appraisal of an imaging technique in cardiology [12]. More recently, the Cambridge group led what is still the only prospective randomised study of non-invasive imaging compared with invasive angiography and confirmed the cost-effectiveness of MPS compared with echocardiography and MRI [13].
In assisting the technology appraisal of MPS, the BNMS, BNCS and other professional bodies collaborated to review the evidence for MPS in clinical practice and the resulting publication became the most quoted EJNM publication in 2008 [14]. Since then, an alphabet cocktail of studies (BARI, COURAGE, DEFER, ERASE, FAME, GRACE, INSPIRE, etc.) has shown, among other things, that ischaemia-guided intervention in patients with CAD leads to better clinical outcomes. It should now be unusual for patients with stable disease to undergo revascularisation procedures without some form of functional assessment. The challenge for the future will be to show the advantages of doing this by nuclear cardiology in preference to alternative techniques that in some centres have replaced nuclear cardiology because of more ready access to expertise and equipment.
8.6 The Future
Whether nuclear cardiology will move towards PET from SPECT is unclear. FDG PET is already very valuable for the assessment of myocardial inflammation and infection, such as in sarcoidosis and infected devices (Fig. 8.3).
For perfusion imaging the future is less clear. UK groups have been at the forefront of using rubidium-82 PET, the only perfusion technique that is feasible without an on-site cyclotron, but PET may not gain wide acceptance until more cost-effective techniques become available, possibly such as flurpiridaz, a fluorine-18 labelled perfusion tracer currently in phase 3 trials. In addition, the availability of high resolution and sensitive solid state cameras with the ability to quantify perfusion may challenge PET (Fig. 8.4) [15, 16].
There is the prospect of moving nuclear cardiology into the world of electrophysiology interventions, such as ablation of atrial fibrillation and ventricular arrhythmias. Pilot studies between University College and Royal Brompton Hospitals and have shown that mIBG combined with a solid state camera can localise ganglionated plexi of the sympathetic nervous system that are related to the control of arrhythmia and are potential targets for intervention (Fig. 8.5).
Reports of the demise of nuclear cardiology have therefore been exaggerated. Its future seems assured provided that we continue our proud history within the BNMS of contributing to research, education and clinical application in the field.
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Underwood, S.R. (2016). A History of Nuclear Cardiology in the UK. In: McCready, R., Gnanasegaran, G., Bomanji, J. (eds) A History of Radionuclide Studies in the UK. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-28624-2_8
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