Detection of Urothelial Carcinoma: Comparison of Reduced-Dose Iterative Reconstruction with Standard-Dose Filtered Back Projection
- Author(s)
- Young Eun Bahn; See Hyung Kim; Mi Jeong Kim; Chan Sun Kim; Young Hwan Kim; Seung Hyun Cho
- Keimyung Author(s)
- Kim, See Hyung; Kim, Mi Jeong; Kim, Young Hwan
- Department
- Dept. of Radiology (영상의학)
- Journal Title
- Radiology
- Issued Date
- 2016
- Volume
- 279
- Issue
- 2
- Abstract
- Purpose: To prospectively assess radiation dose, image quality, and
diagnostic performance of computed tomography (CT)
urography for detection of urothelial carcinomas by performing
reduced-dose scanning with iterative reconstruction
(IR) compared with standard-dose scanning with filtered
back projection (FBP).
Materials and
Methods:
The institutional review board approved the study with
written informed patient consent. In total, 2163 patients
at high risk for urothelial carcinomas randomly underwent
standard-dose scanning with FBP (protocol A, 120
kVp for .80 kg body weight; protocol B, 100 kVp for
50–80 kg body weight) or reduced-dose scanning with IR
(protocol C, 100 kVp for .80 kg body weight; protocol
D, 80 kVp for 50–80 kg body weight). Objective image
quality (signal-to-noise ratio and contrast-to-noise ratio)
between the two groups with same weight range was
measured for various regions of interest. Subjective image
quality (visual image noise, artifact, ureter depiction, and
overall image quality) and diagnostic accuracy (per lesion
and per patient) were assessed with three- and five-point
scores, respectively.
Results: Size-specific dose estimate (protocol A vs protocol C, 24.2
mGy vs 19.2 mGy, respectively; protocol B vs protocol
D,13.9 mGy vs 8.8 mGy, respectively) was significantly
lower in reduced-dose scanning (P , .001 for both).
There were significantly higher signal-to-noise and contrast-
to-noise ratios in reduced-dose scanning, except for
the abdominal aorta (P , .05 for all). There was no significant
difference in subjective image quality, except for
artifacts in protocols B and D (range, 4–5 vs 3–4; P ,
.05). Per-lesion diagnostic accuracy was 90.8% (89 of 98,
protocol A), 91.3% (105 of 115, protocol B), 92.9% (79
of 85, protocol C), and 88.8% (111 of 125, protocol D).
Conclusion: Reduced-dose scanning with IR showed dose reduction
and no significant difference of image quality in detection
of urothelial carcinomas, except for some artifacts in 80-
kVp scanning.
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