PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Feasibility of radiation dose reduction with iterative reconstruction in abdominopelvic CT for patients with inappropriate arm positioning.

  • Nieun Seo,
  • Yong Eun Chung,
  • Chansik An,
  • Jin-Young Choi,
  • Mi-Suk Park,
  • Myeong-Jin Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209754
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 12
p. e0209754

Abstract

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BackgroundThe arms-down position increases computed tomography (CT) radiation dose. Iterative reconstruction (IR) could enhance image quality without increasing radiation dose in patients with arms-down position.AimTo investigate the feasibility of reduced-dose CT with IR for patients with inappropriate arm positioning.MethodsTwenty patients who underwent two-phase abdominopelvic CT including standard-dose and reduced-dose CT (performed with 80% of the radiation dose of the standard protocol) with their arms positioned in the abdominal area were included in this study. Reduced-dose CT images were reconstructed using filtered back projection (FBP), hybrid IR, and iterative model reconstruction (IMR). These images were compared with standard-dose CT images reconstructed with FBP. Objective image noise in the liver and subcutaneous fat was measured by standard deviation for the quantitative analysis. Then, two radiologists qualitatively assessed beam hardening artifacts, artificial texture, noise, sharpness, and overall image quality in consensus.ResultsReduced-dose CT with all IR levels had lower objective image noise compared to standard-dose CT with FBP reconstruction (P ConclusionsIR algorithms can reduce beam hardening artifacts in a reduced-dose CT setting in patients with arms-down position, and an intermediate level of hybrid IR allows radiologists to obtain the best image quality. Because the retrospective and single-center nature of our study limited the number of patients, multicenter prospective clinical studies are required to validate our results.