Diagnostics (Apr 2023)

Radiation Dose Reduction for Coronary Artery Calcium Scoring Using a Virtual Noniodine Algorithm on Photon-Counting Detector Computed-Tomography Phantom Data

  • Nicola Fink,
  • Emese Zsarnoczay,
  • U. Joseph Schoepf,
  • Jim O’Doherty,
  • Joseph P. Griffith,
  • Daniel Pinos,
  • Christian Tesche,
  • Jens Ricke,
  • Martin J. Willemink,
  • Akos Varga-Szemes,
  • Tilman Emrich

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13091540
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 9
p. 1540

Abstract

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Background: On the basis of the hypothesis that virtual noniodine (VNI)-based coronary artery calcium scoring (CACS) is feasible at reduced radiation doses, this study assesses the impact of radiation dose reduction on the accuracy of this VNI algorithm on a photon-counting detector (PCD)-CT. Methods: In a systematic in vitro setting, a phantom for CACS simulating three chest sizes was scanned on a clinical PCD-CT. The standard radiation dose was chosen at volumetric CT dose indices (CTDIVol) of 1.5, 3.3, 7.0 mGy for small, medium-sized, and large phantoms, and was gradually reduced by adjusting the tube current resulting in 100, 75, 50, and 25%, respectively. VNI images were reconstructed at 55 keV, quantum iterative reconstruction (QIR)1, and at 60 keV/QIR4, and evaluated regarding image quality (image noise (IN), contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR)), and CACS. All VNI results were compared to true noncontrast (TNC)-based CACS at 70 keV and standard radiation dose (reference). Results: INTNC was significantly higher than INVNI, and INVNI at 55 keV/QIR1 higher than at 60 keV/QIR4 (100% dose: 16.7 ± 1.9 vs. 12.8 ± 1.7 vs. 7.7 ± 0.9; p TNC was higher than CNRVNI, but it was better to use 60 keV/QIR4 (p VNI showed strong correlation and agreement at every radiation dose (p 0.9, intraclass correlation coefficient > 0.9). The coefficients of the variation in root-mean squared error were less than 10% and thus clinically nonrelevant for the CACSVNI of every radiation dose. Conclusion: This phantom study suggests that CACSVNI is feasible on PCD-CT, even at reduced radiation dose while maintaining image quality and CACS accuracy.

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