Publication date: Available online 2 March 2017
Source:Academic Radiology
Author(s): Joel G. Fletcher, Lifeng Yu, Jeff L. Fidler, David L. Levin, David R. DeLone, David M. Hough, Naoki Takahashi, Sudhakar K. Venkatesh, Anne-Marie G. Sykes, Darin White, Rebecca M. Lindell, Amy L. Kotsenas, Norbert G. Campeau, Vance T. Lehman, Adam C. Bartley, Shuai Leng, David R. Holmes, Alicia Y. Toledano, Rickey E. Carter, Cynthia H. McCollough
Rationale and ObjectivesThis study aims to estimate observer performance for a range of dose levels for common computed tomography (CT) examinations (detection of liver metastases or pulmonary nodules, and cause of neurologic deficit) to prioritize noninferior dose levels for further analysis.Materials and MethodsUsing CT data from 131 examinations (abdominal CT, 44; chest CT, 44; head CT, 43), CT images corresponding to 4%–100% of the routine clinical dose were reconstructed with filtered back projection or iterative reconstruction. Radiologists evaluated CT images, marking specified targets, providing confidence scores, and grading image quality. Noninferiority was assessed using reference standards, reader agreement rules, and jackknife alternative free-response receiver operating characteristic figures of merit. Reader agreement required that a majority of readers at lower dose identify target lesions seen by the majority of readers at routine dose.ResultsReader agreement identified dose levels lower than 50% and 4% to have inadequate performance for detection of hepatic metastases and pulmonary nodules, respectively, but could not exclude any low dose levels for head CT. Estimated differences in jackknife alternative free-response receiver operating characteristic figures of merit between routine and lower dose configurations found that only the lowest dose configurations tested (ie, 30%, 4%, and 10% of routine dose levels for abdominal, chest, and head CT examinations, respectively) did not meet criteria for noninferiority. At lower doses, subjective image quality declined before observer performance. Iterative reconstruction was only beneficial when filtered back projection did not result in noninferior performance.ConclusionOpportunity exists for substantial radiation dose reduction using existing CT technology for common diagnostic tasks.
http://ift.tt/2mRRF1a
Medicine by Alexandros G. Sfakianakis,Anapafseos 5 Agios Nikolaos 72100 Crete Greece,00302841026182,00306932607174,alsfakia@gmail.com,
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