An adult and pediatric size-based contrast administration reduction phantom study for single and dual-energy CT through preservation of contrast-to-noise ratio Journal Article


Authors: Wang, J.; Duan, X.; Mahmood, U.; McKenney, S. E.; Brady, S. L.
Article Title: An adult and pediatric size-based contrast administration reduction phantom study for single and dual-energy CT through preservation of contrast-to-noise ratio
Abstract: Background: Global shortages of iodinated contrast media (ICM) during COVID-19 pandemic forced the imaging community to use ICM more strategically in CT exams. Purpose: The purpose of this work is to provide a quantitative framework for preserving iodine CNR while reducing ICM dosage by either lowering kV in single-energy CT (SECT) or using lower energy virtual monochromatic images (VMI) from dual-energy CT (DECT) in a phantom study. Materials and Methods: In SECT study, phantoms with effective diameters of 9.7, 15.9, 21.1, and 28.5 cm were scanned on SECT scanners of two different manufacturers at a range of tube voltages. Statistical based iterative reconstruction and deep learning reconstruction were used. In DECT study, phantoms with effective diameters of 20, 29.5, 34.6, and 39.7 cm were scanned on DECT scanners from three different manufacturers. VMIs were created from 40 to 140 keV. ICM reduction by lowering kV levels for SECT or switching from SECT to DECT was calculated based on the linear relationship between iodine CNR and its concentration under different scanning conditions. Results: On SECT scanner A, while matching CNR at 120 kV, ICM reductions of 21%, 58%, and 72% were achieved at 100, 80, and 70 kV, respectively. On SECT scanner B, 27% and 80% ICM reduction was obtained at 80 and 100 kV. On the Fast-kV switch DECT, with CNR matched at 120 kV, ICM reductions were 35%, 30%, 23%, and 15% with VMIs at 40, 50, 60, and 68 keV, respectively. On the dual-source DECT, ICM reductions were 52%, 48%, 42%, 33%, and 22% with VMIs at 40, 50, 60, 70, and 80 keV. On the dual-layer DECT, ICM reductions were 74%, 62%, 45%, and 22% with VMIs at 40, 50, 60, and 70 keV. Conclusions: Our work provided a quantitative baseline for other institutions to further optimize their scanning protocols to reduce the use of ICM. © 2024 The Authors. Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics is published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of The American Association of Physicists in Medicine.
Keywords: adult; child; radiation dose; signal noise ratio; tomography, x-ray computed; radiation dosage; chemistry; contrast medium; contrast media; radiography; phantoms, imaging; image processing, computer-assisted; image processing; devices; procedures; iterative reconstruction; signal-to-noise ratio; humans; human; x-ray computed tomography; dual-energy ct; radiography, dual-energy scanned projection; severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2; coronavirus disease 2019; covid-19; sars-cov-2; virtual monochromatic images; iodinated contrast media
Journal Title: Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics
Volume: 25
Issue: 5
ISSN: 1526-9914
Publisher: American College of Medical Physics  
Date Published: 2024-05-01
Start Page: e14340
Language: English
DOI: 10.1002/acm2.14340
PUBMED: 38605540
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC11087157
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Usman Ahmad Mahmood
    46 Mahmood