1 Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology, Goethe University of Frankfurt and Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Hospital, Theodor-Stern-Kai 7, Frankfurt, Hessen 60590, Germany.
AJR Am J Roentgenol. 2015 May;204(5):1049-54. doi: 10.2214/AJR.14.12975.
The objective of our study was to investigate whether the use of a software-based automated tube potential selection (ATPS) CT neck protocol can result in radiation dose reduction as compared with a set 120-kV protocol without a statistically significant reduction in image quality.
Three hundred sixty-four patients (median age, 52 years) underwent CT of the neck. Group 1 (n = 320) underwent CT with ATPS with 80, 100, or 120 kV. Group 2 (n = 44) was examined with the standard CT protocol at 120 kV. Attenuation, image background noise, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), dose-length product (DLP), volume CT dose index (CTDIvol), body mass index (BMI [weight in kilograms divided by the square of height in meters]), and subjective image quality (5-point Likert scale, two readers in consensus) were analyzed.
A tube potential of 100 kV was selected in 279 patients, 120 kV in 40 patients, and 80 kV in one patient of the ATPS group. A significant correlation was found for selected tube potential and BMI (80 kV, BMI = 20.4; 100 kV, mean BMI = 24.2; 120 kV, BMI = 28.6; r = 0.28, p < 0.01). The average radiation dose was significantly lower with ATPS activated than with the standard protocol (mean DLP, 259 vs 350 mGy × cm, respectively). Background noise did not differ between groups 1 and 2 at the levels of the mandibular angle and the upper mediastinum; however, attenuation and SNR increased significantly with lower tube potential settings. Subjective image quality did not suffer (mean image quality score: ATPS protocol vs standard protocol, 4.56 vs 4.61, respectively; p > 0.05) with good interobserver agreement (κ > 0.56).
ATPS allows significant dose savings for CT of the neck compared with a standard protocol that uses a fixed 120-kV setting without a statistically significant reduction in image quality.
本研究旨在探讨与使用固定 120kV 管电压的标准 CT 颈部协议相比,基于软件的自动管电压选择(ATPS)CT 颈部协议是否能在不显著降低图像质量的情况下降低辐射剂量。
364 例患者(中位年龄 52 岁)接受了颈部 CT 检查。第 1 组(n=320)采用 ATPS 进行 CT 检查,管电压为 80、100 或 120kV。第 2 组(n=44)采用标准 120kV CT 协议进行检查。分析衰减、图像背景噪声、信噪比(SNR)、剂量长度乘积(DLP)、容积 CT 剂量指数(CTDIvol)、体重指数(BMI[体重以千克为单位除以身高的平方])和主观图像质量(5 分李克特量表,两位读者达成共识)。
在 ATPS 组中,279 例患者选择了 100kV 管电压,40 例患者选择了 120kV 管电压,1 例患者选择了 80kV 管电压。所选管电压与 BMI 之间存在显著相关性(80kV,BMI=20.4;100kV,平均 BMI=24.2;120kV,BMI=28.6;r=0.28,p<0.01)。与标准方案相比,激活 ATPS 后平均辐射剂量显著降低(平均 DLP,分别为 259 与 350mGy×cm)。下颌角和上纵隔水平的两组背景噪声无差异;然而,随着管电压设定值的降低,衰减和 SNR 显著增加。主观图像质量没有受到影响(平均图像质量评分:ATPS 方案与标准方案分别为 4.56 与 4.61;p>0.05),观察者间一致性良好(κ>0.56)。
与使用固定 120kV 设定值的标准方案相比,ATPS 可显著降低颈部 CT 扫描的剂量,而图像质量无统计学意义的降低。