Paediatric cardiac CT examinations: impact of the iterative reconstruction method ASIR on image quality - preliminary findings

Miéville, Frédéric ; Gudinchet, François ; Rizzo, Elena ; Ou, Phalla ; Brunelle, Francis ; Bochud, François ; Verdun, Francis

In: Pediatric Radiology, 2011, vol. 41, no. 9, p. 1154-1164

Ajouter à la liste personnelle
    Summary
    Background: Radiation dose exposure is of particular concern in children due to the possible harmful effects of ionizing radiation. The adaptive statistical iterative reconstruction (ASIR) method is a promising new technique that reduces image noise and produces better overall image quality compared with routine-dose contrast-enhanced methods. Objective: To assess the benefits of ASIR on the diagnostic image quality in paediatric cardiac CT examinations. Materials and methods: Four paediatric radiologists based at two major hospitals evaluated ten low-dose paediatric cardiac examinations (80 kVp, CTDIvol 4.8-7.9mGy, DLP 37.1-178.9mGy·cm). The average age of the cohort studied was 2.6years (range 1day to 7years). Acquisitions were performed on a 64-MDCT scanner. All images were reconstructed at various ASIR percentages (0-100%). For each examination, radiologists scored 19 anatomical structures using the relative visual grading analysis method. To estimate the potential for dose reduction, acquisitions were also performed on a Catphan phantom and a paediatric phantom. Results: The best image quality for all clinical images was obtained with 20% and 40% ASIR (p < 0.001) whereas with ASIR above 50%, image quality significantly decreased (p < 0.001). With 100% ASIR, a strong noise-free appearance of the structures reduced image conspicuity. A potential for dose reduction of about 36% is predicted for a 2- to 3-year-old child when using 40% ASIR rather than the standard filtered back-projection method. Conclusion: Reconstruction including 20% to 40% ASIR slightly improved the conspicuity of various paediatric cardiac structures in newborns and children with respect to conventional reconstruction (filtered back-projection) alone