Infrared thermography in the detection of brown adipose tissue in humans.
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Abstract
PET-CT using 18F-FDG is employed for detecting brown adipose tissue (BAT) in humans. Alternative methods are needed because of the radiation and cost of PET-CT imaging. The aim was to evaluate the accuracy of infrared thermography (IRT) in detecting human BAT benchmarked to PET-CT imaging. Seventeen individuals underwent a total of 29 PET-CT scans, 12 of whom were studied twice, after 2 h of cold stimulation at 19°C, in parallel with measurement of skin temperatures overlying the supraclavicular (SCV) fossa and the lateral upper chest (control), before and after cold stimulation. Of the 29 scans, 20 were BAT positive after cold stimulation. The mean left SCV temperature tended to be higher in the BAT-positive group before and during cooling. It was significantly higher (P = 0.04) than the temperature of the control area, which fell significantly during cooling in the BAT-positive (-1.2 ± 0.3°C, P = 0.002) but not in the negative (-0.2 ± 0.4°C) group. The temperature difference (Δtemp) between left SCV and chest increased during cooling in the BAT-positive (1.2 ± 0.2 to 2.0 ± 0.3°C, P < 0.002) but not in the negative group (0.6 ± 0.1 to 0.7 ± 0.1°C). A Δtemp of 0.9°C conferred a positive predictive value of 85% for SCV BAT, superior to that of SCV temperature. The findings were similar on the right. In conclusion, the Δtemp is significantly and consistently greater in BAT-positive subjects. The Δtemp quantified by IRT after 2-h cooling shows promise as a noninvasive convenient technique for studying SCV BAT function.Introduction
The
recent years have seen a dramatic resurgence of interest in brown
adipose tissue (BAT) in humans. Following the discovery of FDG‐avid
depots in the supraclavicular and neck regions of humans undergoing
Positron Emission Tomography (PET)‐CT scanning, investigations moved
rapidly to histological confirmation of these depots as BAT (Zingaretti
et al. 2009; Lee et al. 2011b)
and then to define its contribution to energy expenditure. Indeed,
efforts have now turned to exploring BAT as a novel therapeutic target
in human metabolic disease.
Currently, PET‐CT is the
gold standard method for the detection of BAT. However, PET‐CT has a
number of limitations, including cost, radiation exposure, and duration
of the procedure (Nedergaard and Cannon 2010; Lee et al. 2013). Diagnostic PET‐CT scans expose substantial radiation to the subject (Huang et al. 2009).
While radiation exposure can be minimized in scans performed for
research purposes, it will continue to limit the use of PET‐CT
particularly for healthy volunteers. Furthermore, the reproducibility of
PET‐CT imaging is poor (Lee et al. 2010)
because of the susceptibility to changes and differences in scanning
temperature and seasonal variations in temperature (Cohade et al. 2003; Au‐Yong et al. 2009; Zukotynski et al. 2009; Ouellet et al. 2011). Therefore, there is a need to develop other methods to investigate BAT physiology.
Because
of the thermogenic properties of BAT, thermal imaging is a potential
method for detecting BAT and studying its function. Using infrared
thermography (IRT), we have previously reported a significantly higher
skin temperature in the region overlying the supraclavicular (SCV) fossa
than the mediastinal (MED) region in 87 individuals (Lee et al. 2011a).
In one subject, this temperature difference became more pronounced
following a meal ingestion and cold exposure, both known stimulants of
BAT activity. Temperature increases within the supraclavicular region in
response to cold exposure have also been confirmed with thermography in
a recent study (Symonds et al. 2012).
However, studies directly comparing and validating the results of IRT
with PET‐CT imaging have not been published. The aim of this study was
to assess the accuracy of IRT to predict the presence of BAT as
benchmarked against PET‐CT imaging specifically to establish
reproducibility, sensitivity, and specificity.
Subjects and Methods
Subjects
Seventeen
healthy subjects (12 men and five women) were studied after obtaining
written informed consents. The mean age (±SD) was 36 ± 8 years and BMI
was 25.4 ± 5.9 kg/m2. Subjects were recruited to undergo
PET‐CT scanning in a study to optimize conditions for the detection of
BAT. In all subjects, PET‐CT scans were undertaken after a 6‐h fast and
none had fasting hyperglycemia. The study was approved by the Human
Research and Ethics Committee of Metro South Health Service.
Methods
All subjects underwent a 2‐h period of cooling at 19°C in an air‐conditioned room prior to intravenous administration of 18F‐FDG.
Of the 17 subjects, 12 subjects were studied twice 2–3 weeks apart.
This was done to determine the reproducibility of BAT detection under
the 2‐h precooling conditions, collectively providing a total of 29
scans for analysis. We previously reported that the reproducibility of
BAT detection under ambient conditions for routine diagnostic PET
scanning (for malignancy staging) is low, being less than 15% (Lee et
al. 2010).
We treated each measurement as separate cases because the brown fat
activity may vary within the same individual between different occasions
of scanning. It was therefore important to determine whether the IRT
measurements correspond to BAT activity on PET scans on every occasion.
PET‐CT imaging
All
subjects were seated and rested comfortably in a quiet room during the
procedure. PET imaging was undertaken at 1 h after intravenous injection
of 75 MBq (2 mCi) of 18F‐FDG on a Biograph mCT 128
(Siemens Healthcare, Erlangen, Germany) equipped with time‐of‐flight
electronics, in three‐dimensional list mode for 30 min in one bed
position covering the skull base to the aortic arch. Noncontrast
low‐dose CT (80 mAs) was subsequently performed for attenuation
correction and localization of FDG‐avid sites. PET and CT image datasets
were reconstructed in axial, coronal, and sagittal planes with a slice
thickness of 4 mm. Images were interpreted by a dual‐qualified
radiologist/nuclear physician using syngo.via software (Siemens Healthcare). BAT volume (in cm3) was quantified for right SCV and left SCV areas by autocontouring of FDG uptake above a set threshold (SUVmax 1.5) that show fat attenuation on CT. PET‐CT images for BAT were classified as “BAT Positive” or “BAT Negative” accordingly.
Infrared thermography
Subjects
were seated in the upright position in an arm chair with head
positioned in a neural position and the subject looking straight ahead.
The upper torso from the chest area to neck region was exposed. A
thermal imaging camera (FLIR B425, 3.1Mpixel, FLIR Systems Australia Pty
Ltd, Melbourne, Vic., Australia) was used to acquire images of the
anterior neck and upper chest region. The camera was positioned at the
level of the neck 1 m from the subject's face. IRT was performed on all
subjects at baseline ambient room temperature and then at 60 and 120 min
during cooling at 19°C prior to PET‐CT scanning.
Using
FLIR Research IR Professional Analyzing Software (Version 1.2,
Wilsonville, OR), skin temperatures overlying the SCV fossa bilaterally
and an area in the upper chest just lateral to the sternum approximating
the second intercostal space (control) were determined for each image.
Analyses were performed for both right and left SCV regions (Fig. (Fig.11).
Mean
(±SE) temperatures over the left (L) and right (R) supraclavicular
areas (upper panel) and the anterior chest (lower panel) over 2 h of
cooling at 19°C in an air‐conditioned room in subjects with positive and
negative PET ...
For
thermal analysis, the camera was set to fusion mode which displays a
fusion of digital and thermal images. The emissivity was set to 0.98 for
skin as detailed by the FLIR operations manual.
Temperature
measurement of the SCV region was performed as follows. A circle, 2 cm
margins, centered immediately above the midclavicle was selected for
temperature analysis. In instances where there is a temperature gradient
peak in the SCV fossa, there is a color gradation of increasing
temperature from the periphery to the middle of the area. A target
region of measurement was set around the first temperature contour
gradient from the periphery and the highest temperature within this
target area was recorded for later analysis. In images where no
temperature gradient is apparent, an area above the midclavicle
corresponding to the SCV fossa was selected for temperature measurement.
This procedure was repeated for the chest control area. There was no
difference in skin temperatures of the chest control areas on the left
and the right. Analyses were undertaken using only the chest control
readings on the left. iButtons are available as a means of recording
skin temperature directly. iButtons were not used in this study because
preliminary evaluation revealed excellent concordance between the camera
and iButtons readings.
Statistical analysis
Statistical
analysis was performed using SPSS version 21 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL,
USA). Data are reported as mean ± SEM. The unpaired t‐test was
used to compare data between the BAT‐positive and BAT‐negative groups.
Two‐way repeated measures ANOVA was employed to determine whether
temperatures changed significantly during cooling and whether this was
influenced by PET status. Pearson correlation analysis was employed to
test the relationships between different variables. Differences in
temperatures during cooling between PET‐positive and PET‐negative groups
were determined by two‐way ANOVA. The sensitivity and specificity of
IRT were determined by ROC analysis. A P value <0.05 was considered significant.
Results
Of the 29 scans performed after precooling, 20 were positive for BAT and nine were negative (Table 1).
Of the 12 subjects who were studied twice, 10 had concordant scans
(seven repeat positive, three repeat negative scans) while two subjects
had discordant scans. 15 participants had repeat thermography images
taken twice within 1 min on at least one occasion. The mean difference
in recorded temperature between two images for 15 subjects was 0.06 ±
0.01°C with a CV of 0.009%.
Clinical characteristics of subjects categorized to BAT status as defined by PET‐CT imaging. Data are expressed as Mean ± SEM
SCV temperature
At
baseline before cooling, mean left SCV temperature in the PET positive
tended to be higher than that in the PET‐negative group (32.8 ± 0.3 vs.
31.5 ± 0.5, P =0.055) (Fig. (Fig.1).1). A similar trend was present on the right (32.4 ± 0.3 vs. 31.4 ± 0.6, P =0.06).
After
2‐h cooling, the mean SCV temperature remained higher in PET‐positive
than PET‐negative group on both sides (left 32.3 ± 0.3 vs. 31.3 ± 0.5, P =0.08 and right 31.6 ± 0.3 vs. 31.0 ± 0.5, P =0.1),
but the differences did not reach statistical significance nor did the
temperature change significantly over the 2‐h cooling period (two‐way
ANOVA) (Fig. (Fig.11).
Comparing
left and right SCV temperatures, the mean skin temperature after 2‐h
cooling overlying the left SCV was significantly higher than that on the
right for both PET‐positive (32.3 ± 0.3 vs. 31.6 ± 0.3°C, P <0.001) and PET‐negative groups (31.3 ± 0.5 vs. 31.0 ± 0.5°C, P <0.01).
The
mean BAT volume in the left SCV fossa was not significantly different
to that of the right on the PET scan. SCV temperatures did not correlate
significantly with SCV BAT volume.
Control chest temperature
At
baseline before cooling, there was no difference in the mean chest
temperatures between PET‐positive and PET‐negative groups (31.2 ± 0.4
vs. 30.9 ± 0.4) (Fig. (Fig.11).
After
cooling, the mean chest temperature fell significantly by 1.2 ± 0.3°C
(p = 0.002) in the PET‐positive but not in the PET‐negative (0.2 ±
0.4°C) group (Fig. (Fig.1)1) and the difference was significant between the groups (P =0.04).
As cooling induced a greater fall in chest than in SCV temperatures,
this resulted in a rise in the magnitude of temperature difference (
temp) between the two sites.
Temperature difference between SCV and control chest areas (
temp)
At
baseline before cooling, in the BAT‐positive group, the mean SCV
temperatures on both sides were significantly higher than the control
chest temperature (Fig. (Fig.1).1).
Similarly, in the BAT‐negative group, the mean SCV temperatures on both
sides were also significantly higher than mean chest temperature.
temp was greater in the BAT positive than in the negative group on the left (1.2 ± 0.2 vs. 0.6 ± 0.1°C, P =0.04) and right sides (1.0 ± 0.2 vs. 0.5 ± 0.01°C, P =0.04) (Fig. (Fig.2).2). The
temp was significantly greater on the left than on the right side (P =0.004) in the BAT‐positive group.
Upper
panel shows Individual paired plots in PET‐positive (left panels) and
PET‐negative (right panels) subjects studied before and after 2 h of
cooling. The temperature difference (
temp) between supraclavicular (left and right) ...
After cooling,
temp
between SCV and chest areas remained significantly greater in the BAT
positive than the negative group on the left (2.1 ± 0.3 vs. 0.7 ± 0.1°C,
P =0.002) and the right side (1.4 ± 0.3 vs. 0.4 ± 0.1°C, P =0.02). Moreover, for the 20 positive scans, the SCV BAT volume was significantly correlated with
temp which was stronger on the left side (r = 0.57, P =0.004) than on the right (r = 0.49, P =0.02).
Representative
PET/CT scans and corresponding thermograms before and after cooling
from two PET‐positive and a PET‐negative subject are shown in Figure 3.
For the two positive scans, SCV temperatures are higher than the
adjacent lateral areas before and after cooling. Note the fall in chest
temperature after cooling. In the PET‐negative subject, the temperature
in the SCV fossa is similar to the adjacent lateral area. There is no
change in chest temperature after cooling.
Representative
PET‐CT and thermography images before and after 120‐min cooling for (A)
two BAT‐positive subjects and (B) one BAT‐negative subject. In A, the
thermograms for both PET‐positive subjects indicate that ...
ROC analysis
Before cooling, ROC analysis revealed that an optimal discriminant
temp of >0.9 conferred a sensitivity of 77% and specificity of 78% on the left for a positive PET scan (Table 2).
After 2 h of cooling, sensitivity increased to 87% with specificity
unchanged. On the right, before cooling a Δtemp of ≥ 0.9°C conferred a
sensitivity and specificity figures of 59% and 89% and after cooling,
68% and 78%, respectively. The sensitivities and specificities of SCV
temperatures on the left and right were inferior to those of the
corresponding
temps. The corresponding positive and negative predictive values displayed in Table 2 show that the
temp
of 0.9 on the left side at 2 h of cooling confers a positive predictive
value of 85% and negative predictive value of 77% for a positive PET
scan. The sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values for SCV
temperatures were inferior to corresponding
temps regardless of the side of analysis.
Discussion
IRT is an established and accepted technique for studying BAT function in small animals (Mccafferty 2007; Marks et al. 2009; Gilbert et al. 2012; Warner et al. 2013). Studies employing IRT to assess BAT activity in humans are beginning to emerge (Lee et al. 2011a; Symonds et al. 2012).
However, the predictive value for detecting BAT by IRT in humans has
not been rigorously assessed. This study investigated the usefulness of
IRT as a tool for detecting BAT in humans by validating thermal imaging
to that of positive PET‐CT imaging. During controlled cold stimulation
in an air‐conditioned room, the mean skin temperature over the SCV fossa
tended to be higher in the BAT‐positive group. Mean SCV temperatures
were consistently higher than that over the chest in both BAT‐positive
and BAT‐negative groups. The temperature difference between SCV and
chest areas was significantly greater in the BAT‐positive group,
correlated significantly with BAT volume and was consistently greater on
the left. This temperature difference increased during cooling, an
effect resulting from a fall in chest temperature rather than a rise in
SCV temperature. The
temp after cooling correlated significantly with BAT volume. The
temperature difference was a better predictor of PET status than SCV
temperature.
The observation that BAT‐positive subjects
exhibited a fall in chest temperature compared to BAT‐negative
counterparts is intriguing. It is conceivable that skin temperature over
the chest provides afferent sensory input for the central activation of
the SNS required to stimulate BAT function. Thus, a lower chest
cutaneous temperature triggers a greater activation of BAT to maintain
SCV temperature at a level which might have been lower in the absence of
BAT activity. It is possible that the amount of body fat influenced the
magnitude of the fall in chest temperature during cooling. Diminished
thermal insulation could trigger the SNS, simultaneously stimulating BAT
activity and causing peripheral skin vasoconstriction. As we did not
measure body composition, we are unable to determine whether the
proportion of body fat was lower in PET‐positive subjects.. Several
studies have reported that body mass index is a negative predictor of
BAT activity (Lee et al. 2013).
In this study, mean body mass index tended to be lower among the
PET‐positive subjects. Regardless of the mechanism(s), we have observed,
in BAT‐positive subjects, higher SCV temperature, a greater skin
temperature difference between BAT‐positive and ‐negative sites that is
significantly correlated with the mass of BAT. These findings provide
strong evidence that BAT in adult human is thermogenic and detectable by
IRT.
We undertook a systematic ROC analysis of the impact of cooling on the value of SCV temperature and the
temp
in predicting BAT as identified by PET/CT. It is well established that
cold stimulation enhances the detection and activity of BAT as assessed
by PET‐CT imaging in humans. The rate of BAT detectability increases
from 5–10% at ambient temperature to over 90% after cold stimulation
(Lee et al. 2011b), a change equating to an increase in BAT activity of 10‐ to 15‐fold (Virtanen et al. 2009). SCV temperature was far inferior to
temperatures and cooling had little effect because SCV temperatures did
not change. In contrast, cooling enhanced the predictive value of
temp on both left and right sides. Like PET‐CT, the diagnostic power of IRT is enhanced by cooling.
Another
interesting observation was the consistently higher SCV temperature on
the left than on the right, regardless of BAT status, and a greater
temperature difference on the left between SCV and chest areas in
BAT‐positive subjects. We observed no differences in SCV BAT mass
between the sides nor asymmetry in the FDG uptake in those with positive
scans suggesting that the lateralization is unlikely to be BAT related.
The cooling technique is also unlikely to have had much bearing;
subjects sat in an air‐conditioned room where cooling was spread evenly.
Moreover, this temperature difference is evident before cooling and
maintained throughout. We speculate that higher SCV skin temperature on
the left arises from the unique vascular anatomy from a capacious
brachiocephalic vein on the left.
IRT has several
advantages. The procedure is convenient as it can be undertaken within
minutes, unlike PET‐CT which requires a postinjection and scanning time
of at least 2 h. Importantly, there is no radiation exposure with IRT,
whereas for PET‐CT using a standard FDG dose, the radiation from a
single study for oncological indications far exceeds radiation safety
limits for investigative studies in normal subjects. Another useful
application for IRT is in the monitoring of changes in BAT activity over
minutes or hours that cannot be done with PET‐CT, which is restricted
to a single time domain of capture over 1 h. In that regard, IRT offers
considerable advantages as a safer and more flexible tool for studying
BAT function and activity.
IRT conferred a probability
of greater than 80% in predicting BAT. While promising, we caution
against using IRT independent of PET‐CT imaging until more evaluations
are published. At this stage, we propose that it serves as a screening
tool for selecting subjects for regulatory studies of BAT function in
whom the presence of significant BAT activity is initially confirmed by
PET‐CT imaging. A baseline of PET positivity brings specificity to the
interpretation of changes in temperature difference between the neck and
chest as changes in BAT activity.
One of the
limitations of IRT is that it is confined to studying BAT that is
located superficially, particularly the SCV fossa. It is unlikely that
thermogenicity of BAT located in deeper areas can be detected by IRT.
Therefore, the study of BAT activity in humans by IRT is restricted to
superficial BAT depots. Our study population is small and consisted of a
heterogeneous group of individuals of varying age and BMI undergoing
simultaneous PET‐CT scanning after cold stimulation by air conditioning.
Future studies comprising larger numbers are required to provide more
information on the value of IRT in the evaluation of BAT in humans.
This
is the first study investigating the utility of IRT for detecting BAT
referenced to PET‐CT. Our evaluation provides strong evidence that IRT
is a promising noninvasive technique for the detection of BAT in the SCV
region. The discriminant measure is the difference in skin temperatures
between the SCV and the lateral chest areas, and not the temperature
overlying the SCV fossa after cold stimulation. The predictive value of
the temperature difference is better on the left than on the right. IRT
is a useful technology that may complement PET‐CT imaging in the study
of BAT in humans.
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