Erschienen in:
01.03.2016 | Cardiac
Image quality, radiation dose, and diagnostic accuracy of prospectively ECG-triggered high-pitch coronary CT angiography at 70 kVp in a clinical setting: comparison with invasive coronary angiography
verfasst von:
Long Jiang Zhang, Yining Wang, U. Joseph Schoepf, Felix G. Meinel, Richard R. Bayer II, Li Qi, Jian Cao, Chang Sheng Zhou, Yan E Zhao, Xie Li, Jian Bin Gong, Zhengyu Jin, Guang Ming Lu
Erschienen in:
European Radiology
|
Ausgabe 3/2016
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Abstract
Purpose
To investigate image quality, radiation dose, and diagnostic performance of prospectively ECG-triggered high-pitch coronary CT angiography (CCTA) at 70 kVp compared to invasive coronary angiography (ICA) as reference standard.
Materials and methods
Forty-three patients underwent prospectively ECG-triggered high-pitch CCTA at 70 kVp using 30 cc (11 g iodine) contrast medium and ICA. Subjective and objective image quality was evaluated for each CCTA study. CCTA performance for diagnosing ≥50 % stenosis was assessed. Results were stratified according to heart rate (HR), body mass index (BMI), Agatston score, and image quality.
Results
At CCTA, 94.3 % (500/530) of coronary segments were of diagnostic quality. Using ICA as reference standard, sensitivity and accuracy were 100 % and 93.0 % on a per-patient basis. Per-vessel and per-segment performances were 92.2 % and 89.5 %; 79.5 % and 88.3 %, respectively. No differences were found in diagnostic accuracy between different HR, BMI, and calcification subgroups (all P > 0.05) on a per-patient basis. However, low image quality reduced diagnostic accuracy on a per-patient, per-vessel and per-segment basis (all P < 0.05). The mean effective radiation dose was 0.2 ± 0.0 mSv.
Conclusion
Our presented protocol results in an effective radiation dose of 0.2 mSv and high diagnostic accuracy for stenosis detection in a selected, non-obese population.
Key Points
• Prospectively ECG-triggered high-pitch CCTA at 70 kVp is feasible.
• This protocol has a high diagnostic accuracy for stenosis detection.
• The mean effective radiation dose was 0.2 ± 0.0 mSv.
• Only 30 cc of contrast material is used in this protocol.
• Low image quality reduced diagnostic accuracy of CCTA.