| Literature DB >> 34943611 |
David C Rotzinger1,2, Damien Racine2,3, Fabio Becce1,2, Elias Lahoud4, Klaus Erhard5, Salim A Si-Mohamed6,7, Joël Greffier8, Anaïs Viry2,3, Loïc Boussel6,7, Reto A Meuli1,2, Yoad Yagil4, Pascal Monnin2,3, Philippe C Douek6,7.
Abstract
AIMS: To evaluate spectral photon-counting CT's (SPCCT) objective image quality characteristics in vitro, compared with standard-of-care energy-integrating-detector (EID) CT.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac imaging techniques; computed tomography angiography; coronary vessels; image quality enhancement; phantoms imaging
Year: 2021 PMID: 34943611 PMCID: PMC8700425 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics11122376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Figure 1EID-CT (a) and SPCCT (b) systems with the phantom setup that was placed at the isocenter. CCTA module made of PE is shown with an empty cavity (blue star) to be filled with iodinated contrast material solution for the experiments. The anthropomorphic thorax phantom is shown with a fat-mimicking extension ring (“medium” patient size configuration). CCTA—coronary computed tomography angiography; EID-CT—energy-integrating detector computed tomography; PE—polyethylene; SPCCT—spectral photon-counting computed tomography.
Detailed settings for data acquisition and image reconstruction for the investigated CT angiography protocols on both CT systems.
| CT System | EID-CT | PCD-CT |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| CTDIvol (mGy) | 10 | 10 |
|
| ||
| Tube potential (kVp) | 120 | 120 |
| Tube current (mA) | 330 | 330 |
| Gantry revolution time (s) | 0.5 | 0.5 |
| Beam collimation (mm) | 32 × 0.672 | 64 × 0.2724 |
| Scan mode | Helical | Helical |
| Automatic exposure control | Off | Off |
|
| ||
| Display field of view (mm) | 200 × 200 | 200 × 200 |
| Matrix size | 512 × 512 | 512 × 512 |
| Section thickness (mm) | 0.6 | 0.6 |
| Section increment (mm) | 0.6 | 0.6 |
| Kernel | High-res B | PCD-High-res B |
| Algorithm | Filtered back-projection | Filtered back-projection |
CTDIvol—volume CT dose index, EID—energy-integrating detector, PCD—photon-counting detector.
Figure 2Axial CT image shows four examples (1, 2, 3, and 4) of region-of-interest (ROI) placement in the medium phantom for calculation of noise power spectrum (NPS). The position is similar in small and large phantoms.
Figure 3NPS curves obtained on a clinical EID-CT (solid lines) and a prototype PCD-CT (dashed lines) system at various phantom sizes. The area under the curve is representative of the noise magnitude, whereas the NPS center frequency indicates differences in noise texture. NPS—noise power spectrum; PCD-CT—photon-counting detector computed tomography; EID-CT—energy-integrating detector computed tomography.
Noise magnitude reduction and NPS peak frequency shift in percentage differences for PCD-CT in comparison with EID-CT at the three investigated patient sizes.
| Phantom Size | Noise Magnitude Reduction (%) | Peak Frequency Shift (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Small | −9 | 47 |
| Medium | −33 | 37 |
| Large | −38 | 27 |
NPS—noise power spectrum; PCD-CT—photon-counting computed detector computed tomography; EID-CT—energy-integrating computed tomography.
Figure 4TTF curves obtained on a clinical EID-CT (solid lines) and a prototype PCD-CT (dashed lines) system at various phantom sizes. The area under the curve indicates spatial resolution performance. TTF—target transfer function; PCD-CT—photon-counting detector computed tomography; EID-CT—energy-integrating detector computed tomography.
TTF frequency shifts (percentage differences) for PCD-CT compared with EID-CT at the three investigated patient sizes.
| TTF Frequency Shifts (%) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Phantom Size | TTF50 | TTF10 |
| Small | 35 | 30 |
| Medium | 37 | 31 |
| Large | 38 | 33 |
TTF—target transfer function; PCD-CT—photon-counting computed detector computed tomography; EID-CT—energy-integrating computed tomography.
Figure 5Bar chart show detectability indices (d’) of non-calcified atherosclerotic plaque with an object-to-background contrast |ΔHU| of 450 HU and CTDI = 10 mGy in the small (a), medium (b), and large sized (c) phantom setup. A d’ of 2 corresponds to 90% accuracy (AUC). The SPCCT consistently provided higher detectability indices than the conventional system. Note that at large phantom size, only the PCD-CT system could accurately detect (i.e., with a d’ ≥ 2 indicating an AUC of 90%) the smallest simulated plaque (0.5 mm). CTDI—computed tomography dose index; PCD-CT—photon-counting detector computed tomography. CTDI—computed tomography dose index; EID-CT—energy-integrating detector computed tomography; AUC—area under the curve.
Figure 6Bar chart shows detectability indices (d’) of lipid-rich atherosclerotic plaque with an object-to-background contrast |ΔHU| of 30 HU in the small (a), medium (b), and large sized (c) phantom setup. A d’ of 2 corresponds to 90% accuracy (AUC), plotted on the graphs as a black dashed line. The PCD-CT consistently provided higher detectability indices than the conventional system. At the tested CTDI of 10 mGy, neither the EID nor the SPCCT reached 90% AUC to detect a 0.5 mm lipid core. With the small phantom, the EID and SPCCT systems reached 90% AUC down to a lipid core size of 1.5 and 1 mm, respectively. AUC—area under the curve; CTDI—computed tomography dose index; EID-CT—energy-integrating detector computed tomography; PCD-CT—photon-counting detector computed tomography.
Figure 7Visual appearance of the TTF phantom inserted in a small (a,b), medium (c,d), and large (e,f) anthropomorphic chest phantom. Conventional reconstructions obtained from acquisitions on the EID-CT (a,c,e) and the PCD-CT (b,d,f) systems. Zoomed views of the polyethylene/iodinated solution transition better depict the finer noise texture and sharper transition yielded by the PCD-CT. TTF—target transfer function; PCD-CT—photon-counting detector computed tomography; EID-CT—energy-integrating detector computed tomography.