Literature DB >> 34287949

Heart-centered positioning and tailored beam-shaping filtration for reduced radiation dose in coronary artery calcium imaging: A Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) Study.

Brendan Colvert1, Marzia Rigolli1, Amanda Craine1, Michael Criqui2, Francisco Contijoch1,3.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Cardiac computed tomography has a clear clinical role in the evaluation of coronary artery disease and assessment of coronary artery calcium (CAC) but the use of ionizing radiation limits the clinical use. Beam-shaping "bow-tie" filters determine the radiation dose and the effective scan field-of-view diameter (SFOV) by delivering higher X-ray fluence to a region centered at the isocenter. A method for positioning the heart near the isocenter could enable reduced SFOV imaging and reduce dose in cardiac scans. However, a predictive approach to center the heart, the extent to which heart centering can reduce the SFOV, and the associated dose reductions have not been assessed. The purpose of this study is to build a heart-centered patient positioning model, to test whether it reduces the SFOV required for accurate CAC scoring, and to quantify the associated reduction in radiation dose.
METHODS: The location of 38,184 calcium lesions (3151 studies) in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis was utilized to build a predictive heart-centered positioning model and compare the impact of SFOV on CAC scoring accuracy in heart-centered and conventional body-centered scanning. Then, the positioning model was applied retrospectively to an independent, contemporary cohort of 118 individuals (81 with CAC > 0) at our institution to validate the model's ability to maintain CAC accuracy while reducing the SFOV. In these patients, the reduction in dose associated with a reduced SFOV beam-shaping filter was quantified.
RESULTS: Heart centering reduced the SFOV diameter 25.7% relative to body centering while maintaining high CAC scoring accuracy (0.82% risk reclassification rate). In our validation cohort, imaging at this reduced SFOV with heart-centered positioning and tailored beam-shaping filtration led to a 26.9% median dose reduction (25-75th percentile: 21.6%-29.8%) without any calcium risk reclassification.
CONCLUSIONS: Heart-centered patient positioning enables a significant radiation dose reduction while maintaining CAC accuracy.
© 2021 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  beam-shaping filtration; coronary artery calcium scoring; radiation dose reduction

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34287949      PMCID: PMC8455417          DOI: 10.1002/mp.15106

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Phys        ISSN: 0094-2405            Impact factor:   4.506


  29 in total

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Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2013-03       Impact factor: 4.071

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Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2015-03-15       Impact factor: 79.321

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Journal:  Radiat Prot Dosimetry       Date:  2014-09-16       Impact factor: 0.972

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Authors:  Michael H Criqui; Julie O Denenberg; Joachim H Ix; Robyn L McClelland; Christina L Wassel; Dena E Rifkin; Jeffrey J Carr; Matthew J Budoff; Matthew A Allison
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2014-01-15       Impact factor: 56.272

9.  Association of Coronary Artery Calcium in Adults Aged 32 to 46 Years With Incident Coronary Heart Disease and Death.

Authors:  John Jeffrey Carr; David R Jacobs; James G Terry; Christina M Shay; Stephen Sidney; Kiang Liu; Pamela J Schreiner; Cora E Lewis; James M Shikany; Jared P Reis; David C Goff
Journal:  JAMA Cardiol       Date:  2017-04-01       Impact factor: 14.676

10.  Impact of patient centering in CT on organ dose and the effect of using a positioning compensation system: Evidence from OSLD measurements in postmortem subjects.

Authors:  Izabella Barreto; Rebecca Lamoureux; Catherine Olguin; Nathan Quails; Nathalie Correa; Lynn Rill; Manuel Arreola
Journal:  J Appl Clin Med Phys       Date:  2019-05-02       Impact factor: 2.102

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