RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Is ioflupane I123 injection diagnostically effective in patients with movement disorders and dementia? Pooled analysis of four clinical trials JF BMJ Open JO BMJ Open FD British Medical Journal Publishing Group SP e005122 DO 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005122 VO 4 IS 7 A1 John T O'Brien A1 Wolfgang H Oertel A1 Ian G McKeith A1 Donald G Grosset A1 Zuzana Walker A1 Klaus Tatsch A1 Eduardo Tolosa A1 Paul F Sherwin A1 Igor D Grachev YR 2014 UL http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/4/7/e005122.abstract AB Objectives To pool clinical trials of similar design to assess overall sensitivity and specificity of ioflupane I123 injection (DaTSCAN or ioflupane (123I)) to detect or exclude a striatal dopaminergic deficit disorder (SDDD), such as parkinsonian syndrome and dementia with Lewy bodies. Design Pooled analysis of three phase 3 and one phase 4 clinical trials. These four trials were selected because they were the four studies used for the US new drug application to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Setting Multicentre, open-label, non-randomised. Participants Patients with either a movement disorder or dementia, and healthy volunteers. Interventions Ioflupane (123I) was administered. Outcome measures Images were assessed by panels of 3–5 blinded experts and/or on-site nuclear medicine physicians, classified as normal or abnormal and compared with clinical diagnosis (reference standard) to determine sensitivity and specificity. Results Pooling the four studies, 928 participants were enrolled, 849 were dosed and 764 completed their study. Across all studies, when images were assessed by on-site readers, ioflupane (123I) diagnostic effectiveness had an overall (95% CI) sensitivity of 91.9% (88.7% to 94.5%) and specificity of 83.6% (78.7% to 87.9%). When reads were conducted blindly by a panel of independent experts, the overall sensitivity was 88.7% (86.8% to 90.4%) and specificity was 91.2% (89.0% to 93.0%). Conclusions In this pooled analysis, the visual assessment of ioflupane (123I) images provided high levels of sensitivity and specificity in detecting the presence/absence of an SDDD. Ioflupane (123I) imaging has the potential to improve diagnostic accuracy in patients with signs and symptoms of a movement disorder and/or dementia. Trial registration number NCT00209456.