Clinical utility of receptor imaging in the assessment of liver function

1992 
: Technetium-99m diethylene triamine pentaacetic acid-galactosyl human serum albumin (TcGSA) is a newly developed receptor-binding radiopharmaceutical, specific for the asialoglycoprotein receptor, which resides exclusively on the plasma membrane of hepatocytes. Clinical utility of TcGSA was evaluated in 3 control subjects with normal livers and in 54 patients with various liver diseases. The parameter, Receptor Index, was derived from liver and heart time-activity data and is the ratio of radioactivity of the liver over the radioactivity of the liver plus heart at 15 min after the intravenous injection of 3 mg of TcGSA. Receptor concentration ([R]o) was obtained by kinetic analysis of liver and heart time-activity data using pharmacokinetic nonlinear modeling. Values for the Receptor Index and [R]o was statistically different in the control subjects and in patients with mild, moderate, and severe liver diseases. Good correlations were obtained between the Receptor Index, [R]o and conventional liver function tests, such as Child-Turcotte criteria score, prothrombin time, and indocyanine green test. Receptor Index and [R]o were properly estimated even in patients with obstructive jaundice or remarkable portocaval shunt. These data suggest that the receptor imaging as well as its parameters, Receptor Index and [R]o, is a potentially practical and reliable diagnostic method for estimating the functioning hepatocyte mass and for assessing liver function.
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