Krishnasetty Vikram, Bonab Ali A, Fischman Alan J, Halpern Elkan F, Aquino Suzanne L
Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, USA.
J Am Coll Radiol. 2008 Apr;5(4):579-84. doi: 10.1016/j.jacr.2007.12.007.
To determine if low-dose attenuation correction computed tomography (CTAC) 1) provides images with acceptable anatomic definition and noise compared with standard-dose CTAC and 2) provides acceptable positron emission tomographic attenuation correction.
Positron emission tomography/computed tomography was performed on 78 patients. Forty-three patients underwent CTAC with tube current based on a standard weight-based scale. A second group of 35 patients underwent CTAC with tube current based on a low-dose weight-based scale. In a blinded review, two radiologists rated each examination for anatomic definition and image noise at 4 major anatomic levels using a 5-point scale. To evaluate for correct positron emission tomographic attenuation correction at the standard and reduced radiation doses on CTAC, water phantom studies using both imaging techniques were performed and compared.
Patients who underwent low-dose CTAC received a mean 60.6% reduction in radiation dose compared with those who underwent standard-dose CTAC (P < .0001). Low-dose CTAC demonstrated statistically significant poorer ratings for anatomic detail and noise at each of the 4 anatomic levels (P < .0001) compared with standard-dose CTAC. Scans were graded acceptable for diagnostic interpretation if scores for image noise and anatomic definition were greater than 3 at all anatomic levels. There was a significant difference between the number of acceptable diagnostic scans in the standard-dose group (88.4%) compared with the low-dose group (17.1%) (P < .0001). There was no statistical difference in attenuation correction values in low-dose and standard-dose attenuation correction maps of the water phantom.
Low-dose CTAC significantly reduced the effective dose while providing optimal positron emission tomographic attenuation correction. However, because of decreased image quality, low-dose CTAC was not acceptable for diagnostic interpretation.
确定低剂量衰减校正计算机断层扫描(CTAC)1)与标准剂量CTAC相比,能否提供具有可接受的解剖清晰度和噪声的图像,以及2)能否提供可接受的正电子发射断层扫描衰减校正。
对78例患者进行正电子发射断层扫描/计算机断层扫描。43例患者根据基于标准体重的量表采用管电流进行CTAC。第二组35例患者根据基于低剂量体重的量表采用管电流进行CTAC。在双盲评估中,两名放射科医生使用5分制对4个主要解剖层面的每次检查的解剖清晰度和图像噪声进行评分。为了评估CTAC在标准和降低辐射剂量下正电子发射断层扫描衰减校正是否正确,使用两种成像技术进行了水模研究并进行比较。
与接受标准剂量CTAC的患者相比,接受低剂量CTAC的患者辐射剂量平均降低了60.6%(P <.0001)。与标准剂量CTAC相比,低剂量CTAC在4个解剖层面中的每个层面的解剖细节和噪声评分在统计学上均显著较差(P <.0001)。如果所有解剖层面的图像噪声和解剖清晰度评分均大于3,则扫描分级为可接受用于诊断解读。标准剂量组(88.4%)与低剂量组(17.1%)的可接受诊断扫描数量存在显著差异(P <.0001)。水模的低剂量和标准剂量衰减校正图中的衰减校正值无统计学差异。
低剂量CTAC显著降低了有效剂量,同时提供了最佳的正电子发射断层扫描衰减校正。然而,由于图像质量下降,低剂量CTAC用于诊断解读是不可接受的。