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Assessment of quantification accuracy and image quality of a full-body dual-layer spectral CT system

  • Sebastian Ehn
  • , Thorsten Sellerer
  • , Daniela Muenzel
  • , Alexander A. Fingerle
  • , Felix Kopp
  • , Manuela Duda
  • , Kai Mei
  • , Bernhard Renger
  • , Julia Herzen
  • , Julia Dangelmaier
  • , Benedikt J. Schwaiger
  • , Andreas Sauter
  • , Isabelle Riederer
  • , Martin Renz
  • , Rickmer Braren
  • , Ernst J. Rummeny
  • , Franz Pfeiffer
  • , Peter B. Noël
  • Technical University of Munich

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

77 Scopus citations

Abstract

The performance of a recently introduced spectral computed tomography system based on a dual-layer detector has been investigated. A semi-anthropomorphic abdomen phantom for CT performance evaluation was imaged on the dual-layer spectral CT at different radiation exposure levels (CTDIvol of 10 mGy, 20 mGy and 30 mGy). The phantom was equipped with specific low-contrast and tissue-equivalent inserts including water-, adipose-, muscle-, liver-, bone-like materials and a variation in iodine concentrations. Additionally, the phantom size was varied using different extension rings to simulate different patient sizes. Contrast-to-noise (CNR) ratio over the range of available virtual mono-energetic images (VMI) and the quantitative accuracy of VMI Hounsfield Units (HU), effective-Z maps and iodine concentrations have been evaluated. Central and peripheral locations in the field-of-view have been examined. For all evaluated imaging tasks the results are within the calculated theoretical range of the tissue-equivalent inserts. Especially at low energies, the CNR in VMIs could be boosted by up to 330% with respect to conventional images using iDose/spectral reconstructions at level 0. The mean bias found in effective-Z maps and iodine concentrations averaged over all exposure levels and phantom sizes was 1.9% (eff. Z) and 3.4% (iodine). Only small variations were observed with increasing phantom size (+3%) while the bias was nearly independent of the exposure level (±0.2%). Therefore, dual-layer detector based CT offers high quantitative accuracy of spectral images over the complete field-of-view without any compromise in radiation dose or diagnostic image quality.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)204-217
Number of pages14
JournalJournal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics
Volume19
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2018

Keywords

  • Dual-energy CT
  • Effective atomic number
  • Iodine quantification
  • Spectral CT
  • Virtual mono-energetic imaging

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