From the Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic, 200 First St SW, Rochester, MN 55905.
Radiology. 2022 May;303(2):404-411. doi: 10.1148/radiol.210860. Epub 2022 Jan 18.
Background The size-specific dose estimate (SSDE) is a patient-focused CT dose metric. However, published size-dependent conversion factors () used to calculate SSDE were determined primarily by using phantoms; only eight to 15 patient data sets were used, all at 120 kV. Purpose To determine the effect of different tube potentials on the water-equivalent diameter (WED) and SSDE for patient CT scans of the head, chest, and abdomen. Materials and Methods This retrospective study used 250 noncontrast CT scans acquired between March 2013 and June 2017. Bony structures were segmented, and their CT numbers were modified to reflect bone attenuation at 70, 90, 110, 130, and 150 kV. Soft-tissue CT numbers were unchanged because of negligible energy dependence. was measured in anthropomorphic phantoms for each tube potential and fit to an exponential function. WED and SSDE were determined for each patient at all tube potentials, regression analysis was performed relative to the WED and SSDE at 120 kV, and mean differences relative to 120 kV were calculated. Results In 250 patients (median age, 21.5 years; interquartile range, 44 years; 130 women), WED for all tube potentials was linearly related to the WED at 120 kV in all body regions ( = 0.995-1.000). The effect of tube potential on WED was negligible for torso examinations (Cohen < 0.05). In the head, a medium effect size was observed at 70 kV; however, the mean absolute difference in WED was small (-0.49 cm ± 0.08 [standard deviation]; < .001). For commonly used combinations of tube potential and patient size, the mean differences in SSDE at alternative tube potentials relative to SSDE at 120 kV were less than 5%. Conclusion At noncontrast CT, published size-dependent conversion factors accurately determined size-specific dose estimates on 250 patient scans at five tube potentials other than 120 kV. © RSNA, 2022 See also the editorial by Boone in this issue.
背景 基于体型的剂量估算(SSDE)是一种以患者为中心的 CT 剂量指标。然而,已发表的用于计算 SSDE 的体型相关转换系数()主要是通过使用体模确定的;仅使用了 8 至 15 套患者数据集,且均在 120 kV 下进行。 目的 确定不同管电压对头部、胸部和腹部患者 CT 扫描的水当量直径(WED)和 SSDE 的影响。 材料与方法 本回顾性研究使用了 2013 年 3 月至 2017 年 6 月间获取的 250 例非增强 CT 扫描。对骨性结构进行分割,并修改其 CT 值以反映 70、90、110、130 和 150 kV 下的骨衰减。由于能量依赖性可忽略不计,软组织 CT 值保持不变。为每个管电压测量了体模中的,并拟合为指数函数。在所有管电压下确定了每位患者的 WED 和 SSDE,对 WED 和 SSDE 与 120 kV 进行回归分析,并计算相对于 120 kV 的平均差异。 结果 在 250 例患者(中位年龄,21.5 岁;四分位间距,44 岁;130 例女性)中,所有管电压下的 WED 与所有身体区域的 120 kV 下的 WED 呈线性相关(=0.995-1.000)。管电压对 WED 的影响在躯干部检查中可忽略不计(Cohen <0.05)。在头部,70 kV 时观察到中等效应大小;然而,WED 的平均绝对差异较小(-0.49 cm±0.08[标准差];<0.001)。对于管电压和患者体型的常用组合,相对于 120 kV 的 SSDE,替代管电压下的 SSDE 平均差异小于 5%。 结论 在非增强 CT 中,在 250 例患者的扫描中,使用五种管电压而非 120 kV 时,已发表的体型相关转换系数可准确确定基于体型的剂量估算值。