Objective: To assess the splenic and whole body retention of radiolabeled autologous leukocytes over 24 or 48 h as measures of the severity of colitis.
Methods: Eleven patients with colitis underwent standardized clinical, endoscopic, histological, and 111In-labeled leukocyte scintigraphy. A logistic discriminant analysis was used to estimate weighting factors for morphological indices, serum albumen, and stool excretion of 111In over 24 h that predicted the clinical assessment of severity. Subsequently, Spearman rank correlation analysis estimated associations among reductions in spleen and whole body radioactivity and the derived indices of inflammation.
Results: The reduction in spleen counts over 24 h correlates significantly with morphological indices (rs = 0.83, p < 0.005) and with serum albumen and stool 111In (functional index, rs = 0.77, p < 0.01). Similarly, the reduction in whole body 111In over 48 h correlates significantly with the combined index (rs = 0.8) and with the morphological and functional index separately (rs = 0.72 and 0.79, respectively).
Conclusion: This pilot study identified weighting factors for morphological and functional indices in assessing severity of colitis; reduction in whole body and splenic retention of radioactivity was sufficient for evaluation of severity of colitis without the need for stool collections.