Scientific Reports (Sep 2023)

Photon-counting computed tomography of coronary and peripheral artery stents: a phantom study

  • Thomas Stein,
  • Jana Taron,
  • Niklas Verloh,
  • Michael Doppler,
  • Alexander Rau,
  • Muhammad Taha Hagar,
  • Sebastian Faby,
  • Dimos Baltas,
  • Dirk Westermann,
  • Isabelle Ayx,
  • Stefan O. Schönberg,
  • Konstantin Nikolaou,
  • Christopher L. Schlett,
  • Fabian Bamberg,
  • Jakob Weiss

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-41854-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Accurate small vessel stent visualization using CT remains challenging. Photon-counting CT (PCD-CT) may help to overcome this issue. We systematically investigate PCD-CT impact on small vessel stent assessment compared to energy-integrating-CT (EID). 12 water-contrast agent filled stents (3.0–8 mm) were scanned with patient-equivalent phantom using clinical PCD-CT and EID-CT. Images were reconstructed using dedicated vascular kernels. Subjective image quality was evaluated by 5 radiologists independently (5-point Likert-scale; 5 = excellent). Objective image quality was evaluated by calculating multi-row intensity profiles including edge rise slope (ERS) and coefficient-of-variation (CV). Highest overall reading scores were found for PCD-CT-Bv56 (3.6[3.3–4.3]). In pairwise comparison, differences were significant for PCD-CT-Bv56 vs. EID-CT-Bv40 (p ≤ 0.04), for sharpness and blooming respectively (all p < 0.05). Highest diagnostic confidence was found for PCD-CT-Bv56 (p ≤ 0.2). ANOVA revealed a significant effect of kernel strength on ERS (p < 0.001). CV decreased with stronger PCD-CT kernels, reaching its lowest in PCD-CT-Bv56 and highest in EID-CT reconstruction (p ≤ 0.05). We are the first study to verify, by phantom setup adapted to real patient settings, PCD-CT with a sharp vascular kernel provides the most favorable image quality for small vessel stent imaging. PCD-CT may reduce the number of invasive coronary angiograms, however, more studies needed to apply our results in clinical practice.