19 results on '"den Harder, Annemarie M"'
Search Results
2. Incidental findings on routine preoperative noncontrast chest computed tomography and chest radiography prior to cardiac surgery in the multicenter randomized controlled CRICKET study.
- Author
-
Knol, Wiebe G., den Harder, Annemarie M., de Heer, Linda M., Benke, Kálmán, Maurovich-Horvat, Pál, Leiner, Tim, Merkely, Béla, Krestin, Gabriel P., Bogers, Ad J.J.C., and Budde, Ricardo P.J.
- Subjects
- *
CARDIAC surgery , *COMPUTED tomography , *PATIENT management , *MEDICAL screening , *EARLY detection of cancer - Abstract
Objective: To describe the prevalence and consequences of incidental findings when implementing routine noncontrast CT prior to cardiac surgery. Methods: In the multicenter randomized controlled CRICKET study, 862 adult patients scheduled for cardiac surgery were randomized 1:1 to undergo standard of care (SoC), which included a chest-radiograph, or an additional preoperative noncontrast chest CT-scan (SoC+CT). In this subanalysis, all incidental findings detected on the chest radiograph and CT-scan were analyzed. The influence of smoking status on incidental findings was also evaluated, adjusting for sex, age, and group allocation. Results: Incidental findings were observed in 11.4% (n = 49) of patients in the SoC+CT group and in 3.7% (n = 16) of patients in the SoC-group (p < 0.001). The largest difference was observed in findings requiring follow-up (SoC+CT 7.7% (n = 33) vs SoC 2.3% (n = 10), p < 0.001). Clinically relevant findings changing the surgical approach or requiring specific treatment were observed in 10 patients (1.2%, SoC+CT: 1.6% SoC: 0.7%), including lung cancer in 0.5% of patients (n = 4) and aortic dilatation requiring replacement in 0.2% of patients (n = 2). Incidental findings were more frequent in patients who stopped smoking (OR 1.91, 1.03–3.63) or who actively smoked (OR 3.91, 1.85–8.23). Conclusions: Routine CT-screening increases the rate of incidental findings, mainly by identifying more pulmonary findings requiring follow-up. Incidental findings are more prevalent in patients with a history of smoking, and preoperative CT might increase the yield of identifying lung cancer in these patients. Incidental findings, but not specifically the use of routine CT, are associated with delay of surgery. Key Points: • Clinically relevant incidental findings are identified more often after a routine preoperative CT-scan, when compared to a standard of care workup, with some findings changing patient management. • Patients with a history of smoking have a higher rate of incidental findings and a lung cancer rate comparable to that of lung cancer screening trials. • We observed no clear delay in the time to surgery when adding routine CT screening. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Ultra low-dose chest ct with iterative reconstructions as an alternative to conventional chest x-ray prior to heart surgery (CRICKET study) : Rationale and design of a multicenter randomized trial
- Author
-
den Harder, Annemarie M, de Heer, Linda M, Maurovich-Horvat, Pal, Merkely, Bela, de Jong, Pim A, Das, Marco, de Wit, G Ardine, Leiner, Tim, Budde, Ricardo P J, and CRICKET Investigators
- Subjects
Stroke ,Multicenter Study ,Postoperative complications ,Aortic calcifications ,Randomized Controlled Trial ,Journal Article ,Cardiac surgery ,Computed tomography - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Stroke after cardiac surgery is a severe complication with a persistently high incidence of 1.4 - 9.7%. Postoperative strokes are mainly embolic and can be provoked by manipulation and clamping of the aorta during cardiac surgery, resulting in the mobilization of atherothrombotic material and calcifications from the aortic wall. Computed tomography (CT) can offer preoperative visualization of aortic calcifications with low radiation exposure. We hypothesize that preoperative knowledge regarding the location and extent of aortic calcifications can be used to optimize surgical strategy and decrease postoperative stroke rate. METHODS/DESIGN: The CRICKET study (ultra low-dose chest CT with iterative reconstructions as an alternative to conventional chest x-ray prior to heart surgery) is a prospective multicenter randomized clinical trial to evaluate whether non-contrast chest CT before cardiac surgery can decrease postoperative stroke rate by optimizing surgical strategy. Patients scheduled to undergo cardiac surgery aged 18 years and older are eligible for inclusion. Exclusion criteria are pregnancy, a chest/cardiac CT in the past three months, emergency surgery, concomitant or prior participation in a study with ionizing radiation and unwillingness to be informed about incidental findings. Subjects (n = 1.724) are randomized between routine care, including a chest x-ray, or routine care with an additional low dose chest CT. The primary objective is to investigate whether the postoperative in-hospital stroke rate is reduced in the CT arm compared to the routine care arm of the randomized trial. The secondary outcome measures are altered surgical approach based on CT findings and cost-effectiveness.
- Published
- 2016
4. Brock malignancy risk calculator for pulmonary nodules: validation outside a lung cancer screening population.
- Author
-
Chung, Kaman, Mets, Onno M., Gerke, Paul K., Jacobs, Colin, den Harder, Annemarie M., Scholten, Ernst T., Prokop, Mathias, de Jong, Pim A., van Ginneken, Bram, and Schaefer-Prokop, Cornelia M.
- Subjects
PULMONARY nodules ,LUNG cancer ,COMPUTED tomography ,CANCER ,DIAGNOSIS ,LUNG tumors ,SOLITARY pulmonary nodule ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,RISK assessment ,EVALUATION research ,PREDICTIVE tests ,CASE-control method ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,EARLY detection of cancer - Abstract
Objective: To assess the performance of the Brock malignancy risk model for pulmonary nodules detected in routine clinical setting.Methods: In two academic centres in the Netherlands, we established a list of patients aged ≥40 years who received a chest CT scan between 2004 and 2012, resulting in 16 850 and 23 454 eligible subjects. Subsequent diagnosis of lung cancer until the end of 2014 was established through linking with the National Cancer Registry. A nested case-control study was performed (ratio 1:3). Two observers used semiautomated software to annotate the nodules. The Brock model was separately validated on each data set using ROC analysis and compared with a solely size-based model.Results: After the annotation process the final analysis included 177 malignant and 695 benign nodules for centre A, and 264 malignant and 710 benign nodules for centre B. The full Brock model resulted in areas under the curve (AUCs) of 0.90 and 0.91, while the size-only model yielded significantly lower AUCs of 0.88 and 0.87, respectively (p<0.001). At 10% malignancy risk, the threshold suggested by the British Thoracic Society, sensitivity of the full model was 75% and 81%, specificity was 85% and 84%, positive predictive values were 14% and 10% at negative predictive value (NPV) of 99%. The optimal threshold was 6% for centre A and 8% for centre B, with NPVs >99%.Discussion: The Brock model shows high predictive discrimination of potentially malignant and benign nodules when validated in an unselected, heterogeneous clinical population. The high NPV may be used to decrease the number of nodule follow-up examinations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Radiation dose reduction for CT assessment of urolithiasis using iterative reconstruction: A prospective intra-individual study.
- Author
-
den Harder, Annemarie M., Willemink, Martin J., van Doormaal, Pieter J., Wessels, Frank J., Lock, M. T. W. T., Schilham, Arnold M. R., Budde, Ricardo P. J., Leiner, Tim, and de Jong, Pim A.
- Subjects
- *
RADIATION doses , *URINARY calculi , *COMPUTED tomography , *ULTRASONIC imaging , *UROLOGY , *DIAGNOSIS , *SOCIETIES , *ALGORITHMS , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *DIGITAL image processing , *LONGITUDINAL method , *COMPUTERS in medicine , *URINARY organs - Abstract
Objective: To assess the performance of hybrid (HIR) and model-based iterative reconstruction (MIR) in patients with urolithiasis at reduced-dose computed tomography (CT).Methods: Twenty patients scheduled for unenhanced abdominal CT for follow-up of urolithiasis were prospectively included. Routine dose acquisition was followed by three low-dose acquisitions at 40%, 60% and 80% reduced doses. All images were reconstructed with filtered back projection (FBP), HIR and MIR. Urolithiasis detection rates, gall bladder, appendix and rectosigmoid evaluation and overall subjective image quality were evaluated by two observers.Results: 74 stones were present in 17 patients. Half the stones were not detected on FBP at the lowest dose level, but this improved with MIR to a sensitivity of 100%. HIR resulted in a slight decrease in sensitivity at the lowest dose to 72%, but outperformed FBP. Evaluation of other structures with HIR at 40% and with MIR at 60% dose reductions was comparable to FBP at routine dose, but 80% dose reduction resulted in non-evaluable images.Conclusions: CT radiation dose for urolithiasis detection can be safely reduced by 40 (HIR)-60 (MIR) % without affecting assessment of urolithiasis, possible extra-urinary tract pathology or overall image quality.Key Points: • Iterative reconstruction can be used to substantially lower the radiation dose. • This allows for radiation reduction without affecting sensitivity of stone detection. • Possible extra-urinary tract pathology evaluation is feasible at 40-60% reduced dose. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Accuracy of bone mineral density quantification using dual-layer spectral detector CT: a phantom study.
- Author
-
Hamersvelt, Robbert, Schilham, Arnold, Engelke, Klaus, Harder, Annemarie, Keizer, Bart, Verhaar, Harald, Leiner, Tim, Jong, Pim, Willemink, Martin, van Hamersvelt, Robbert W, Schilham, Arnold M R, den Harder, Annemarie M, de Keizer, Bart, Verhaar, Harald J, de Jong, Pim A, and Willemink, Martin J
- Subjects
BONE density ,COMPUTED tomography ,MEDICAL protocols ,HYDROXYAPATITE ,DUAL-energy X-ray absorptiometry ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Objectives: To investigate the accuracy of bone mineral density (BMD) quantification using dual-layer spectral detector CT (SDCT) at various scan protocols.Methods: Two validated anthropomorphic phantoms containing inserts of 50-200 mg/cm3 calcium hydroxyapatite (HA) were scanned using a 64-slice SDCT scanner at various acquisition protocols (120 and 140 kVp, and 50, 100 and 200 mAs). Regions of interest (ROIs) were placed in each insert and mean attenuation profiles at monochromatic energy levels (90-200 keV) were constructed. These profiles were fitted to attenuation profiles of pure HA and water to calculate HA concentrations. For comparison, one phantom was scanned using dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA).Results: At both 120 and 140 kVp, excellent correlations (R = 0.97, P < 0.001) were found between true and measured HA concentrations. Mean error for all measurements at 120 kVp was -5.6 ± 5.7 mg/cm3 (-3.6 ± 3.2%) and at 140 kVp -2.4 ± 3.7 mg/cm3 (-0.8 ± 2.8%). Mean measurement errors were smaller than 6% for all acquisition protocols. Strong linear correlations (R2 ≥ 0.970, P < 0.001) with DXA were found.Conclusions: SDCT allows for accurate BMD quantification and potentially opens up the possibility for osteoporosis evaluation and opportunistic screening in patients undergoing SDCT for other clinical indications. However, patient studies are needed to extend and translate our findings.Key Points: • Dual-layer spectral detector CT allows for accurate bone mineral density quantification. • BMD measurements on SDCT are strongly linearly correlated to DXA. • SDCT, acquired for several indications, may allow for evaluation of osteoporosis. • This potentially opens up the possibility for opportunistic osteoporosis screening. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Radiation dose reduction in pediatric great vessel stent computed tomography using iterative reconstruction: A phantom study.
- Author
-
den Harder, Annemarie M., Suchá, Dominika, van Doormaal, Pieter J., Budde, Ricardo P. J., de Jong, Pim A., Schilham, Arnold M. R., Breur, Johannes M. P. J., and Leiner, Tim
- Subjects
- *
COMPUTED tomography , *IMAGE reconstruction , *CHEST X rays , *REAR-screen projection , *SIGNAL-to-noise ratio - Abstract
Background: To study dose reduction using iterative reconstruction (IR) for pediatric great vessel stent computed tomography (CT). Methods: Five different great vessel stents were separately placed in a gel-containing plastic holder within an anthropomorphic chest phantom. The stent lumen was filled with diluted contrast gel. CT acquisitions were performed at routine dose, 52% and 81% reduced dose and reconstructed with filtered back projection (FBP) and IR. Objective image quality in terms of noise, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) as well as subjective image quality were evaluated. Results: Noise, SNR and CNR were improved with IR at routine and 52% reduced dose, compared to FBP at routine dose. The lowest dose level resulted in decreased objective image quality with both FBP and IR. Subjective image quality was excellent at all dose levels. Conclusion: IR resulted in improved objective image quality at routine dose and 52% reduced dose, while objective image quality deteriorated at 81% reduced dose. Subjective image quality was not affected by dose reduction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Submillisievert coronary calcium quantification using model-based iterative reconstruction: A within-patient analysis.
- Author
-
den Harder, Annemarie M., Wolterink, Jelmer M., Willemink, Martin J., Schilham, Arnold M.R., de Jong, Pim A., Budde, Ricardo P.J., Nathoe, Hendrik M., Išgum, Ivana, and Leiner, Tim
- Subjects
- *
CALCIFICATION , *RADIATION dosimetry , *CORONARY artery physiology , *COMPUTED tomography , *MEDICAL protocols - Abstract
Purpose: To determine the effect of model-based iterative reconstruction (IR) on coronary calcium quantification using different submillisievert CT acquisition protocols.Methods: Twenty-eight patients received a clinically indicated non contrast-enhanced cardiac CT. After the routine dose acquisition, low-dose acquisitions were performed with 60%, 40% and 20% of the routine dose mAs. Images were reconstructed with filtered back projection (FBP), hybrid IR (HIR) and model-based IR (MIR) and Agatston scores, calcium volumes and calcium mass scores were determined.Results: Effective dose was 0.9, 0.5, 0.4 and 0.2mSv, respectively. At 0.5 and 0.4mSv, differences in Agatston scores with both HIR and MIR compared to FBP at routine dose were small (-0.1 to -2.9%), while at 0.2mSv, differences in Agatston scores of -12.6 to -14.6% occurred. Reclassification of risk category at reduced dose levels was more frequent with MIR (21-25%) than with HIR (18%).Conclusions: Radiation dose for coronary calcium scoring can be safely reduced to 0.4mSv using both HIR and MIR, while FBP is not feasible at these dose levels due to excessive noise. Further dose reduction can lead to an underestimation in Agatston score and subsequent reclassification to lower risk categories. Mass scores were unaffected by dose reductions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Ultra low-dose chest ct with iterative reconstructions as an alternative to conventional chest x-ray prior to heart surgery (CRICKET study): Rationale and design of a multicenter randomized trial.
- Author
-
den Harder, Annemarie M., de Heer, Linda M., Maurovich-Horvat, Pal, Merkely, Bela, de Jong, Pim A., Das, Marco, de Wit, G. Ardine, Leiner, Tim, and Budde, Ricardo P.J.
- Abstract
Background Stroke after cardiac surgery is a severe complication with a persistently high incidence of 1.4 – 9.7%. Postoperative strokes are mainly embolic and can be provoked by manipulation and clamping of the aorta during cardiac surgery, resulting in the mobilization of atherothrombotic material and calcifications from the aortic wall. Computed tomography (CT) can offer preoperative visualization of aortic calcifications with low radiation exposure. We hypothesize that preoperative knowledge regarding the location and extent of aortic calcifications can be used to optimize surgical strategy and decrease postoperative stroke rate. Methods/design The CRICKET study (ultra low-dose chest CT with iterative reconstructions as an alternative to conventional chest x-ray prior to heart surgery) is a prospective multicenter randomized clinical trial to evaluate whether non-contrast chest CT before cardiac surgery can decrease postoperative stroke rate by optimizing surgical strategy. Patients scheduled to undergo cardiac surgery aged 18 years and older are eligible for inclusion. Exclusion criteria are pregnancy, a chest/cardiac CT in the past three months, emergency surgery, concomitant or prior participation in a study with ionizing radiation and unwillingness to be informed about incidental findings. Subjects (n = 1.724) are randomized between routine care, including a chest x-ray, or routine care with an additional low dose chest CT. The primary objective is to investigate whether the postoperative in-hospital stroke rate is reduced in the CT arm compared to the routine care arm of the randomized trial. The secondary outcome measures are altered surgical approach based on CT findings and cost-effectiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Effect of computed tomography before cardiac surgery on surgical strategy, mortality and stroke.
- Author
-
den Harder, Annemarie M., de Heer, Linda M., Meijer, Ronald C.A., Das, Marco, Krestin, Gabriel P., Maessen, Jos G., Bogers, Ad. J.J.C., de Jong, Pim A., Leiner, Tim, and Budde, Ricardo P.J.
- Subjects
- *
COMPLICATIONS of cardiac surgery , *COMPUTED tomography , *STROKE-related mortality , *POSTOPERATIVE period , *CARDIAC catheterization , *CALCIFICATION , *STROKE prevention , *CARDIAC surgery , *PREOPERATIVE care - Abstract
Aim: To investigate whether preoperative chest computed tomography (CT) decreases postoperative mortality and stroke rate in cardiac surgery by detection of calcifications and visualization of postoperative anatomy in redo cardiac surgery which can be used to optimize the surgical approach.Methods: The PubMed, EMBASE and Cochrane databases were searched and articles concerning preoperative CT in cardiac surgery were included. Articles not reporting mortality, stroke rate or change in surgical approach were excluded. Studies concerning primary cardiac surgery as well as articles concerning redo cardiac surgery were both included.Results: Eighteen studies were included (n=4057 patients) in which 2584 patients received a preoperative CT. Seven articles (n=1754 patients) concerned primary surgery and eleven articles (n=2303 patients) concerned redo cardiac surgery. None of the studies was randomized but 8 studies provided a comparison to a control group. Stroke rate decreased with 77-96% (primary surgery) and 18-100% (redo surgery) in patients receiving a preoperative CT. Mortality decreased up to 66% in studies investigating primary surgery while the effect on mortality in redo surgery varied widely. Change in surgical approach based on CT-findings consisted of choosing a different cannulation site, opting for off-pump surgery and cancellation of surgery.Conclusions: Current evidence suggests that preoperative CT imaging may lead to decreased stroke and mortality rate in patients undergoing primary cardiac surgery by optimizing surgical approach. In patients undergoing redo cardiac surgery stroke rate is also decreased but the effect on mortality is unclear. However, evidence is weak and included studies were of moderate quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Dose reduction with iterative reconstruction for coronary CT angiography: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
-
DEN HARDER, ANNEMARIE M., WILLEMINK, MARTIN J., DE RUITER, QUIRINA M. B., DE JONG, PIM A., SCHILHAM, ARNOLD M. R., KRESTIN, GABRIEL P., LEINER, TIM, and BUDDE, RICARDO P. J.
- Subjects
- *
CORONARY angiography , *COMPUTED tomography , *IMAGE reconstruction , *RADIATION doses , *IMAGE quality analysis - Abstract
Objective: To investigate the achievable radiation dose reduction for coronary CT angiography (CCTA) with iterative reconstruction (IR) in adults and the effects on image quality. Methods: PubMed and EMBASE were searched, and original articles concerning IR for CCTA in adults using prospective electrocardiogram triggering were included. Primary outcome was the effective dose using filtered back projection (FBP) and IR. Secondary outcome was the effect of IR on objective and subjective image quality. Results: The search yielded 1616 unique articles, of which 10 studies (1042 patients) were included. The pooled routine effective dose with FBP was 4.2?mSv [95% confidence interval (CI) 3.5-5.0]. A dose reduction of 48% to a pooled effective dose of 2.2?mSv (95% CI 1.3-3.1) using IR was reported. Noise, contrast-to-noise ratio and subjective image quality were equal or improved in all but one study, whereas signal-to-noise ratio was decreased in two studies with IR at reduced dose. Conclusion: IR allows for CCTA acquisition with an effective dose of 2.2?mSv with preserved objective and subjective image quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Effect of radiation dose reduction and iterative reconstruction on computer-aided detection of pulmonary nodules: Intra-individual comparison.
- Author
-
Den Harder, Annemarie M., Willemink, Martin J., van Hamersvelt, Robbert W., Vonken, Evert-jan P.A., Milles, Julien, Schilham, Arnold M.R., Lammers, Jan-Willem, de Jong, Pim A., Leiner, Tim, and Budde, Ricardo P.J.
- Subjects
- *
COMPUTERS in medicine , *IMAGE reconstruction , *FOLLOW-up studies (Medicine) , *LUNG radiography , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ALGORITHMS , *COMPUTED tomography , *COMPUTER software , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *DIGITAL image processing , *LONGITUDINAL method , *LUNG tumors , *RADIATION doses - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the effect of radiation dose reduction and iterative reconstruction (IR) on the performance of computer-aided detection (CAD) for pulmonary nodules.Methods: In this prospective study twenty-five patients were included who were scanned for pulmonary nodule follow-up. Image acquisition was performed at routine dose and three reduced dose levels in a single session by decreasing mAs-values with 45%, 60% and 75%. Tube voltage was fixed at 120 kVp for patients ≥ 80 kg and 100 kVp for patients < 80 kg. Data were reconstructed with filtered back projection (FBP), iDose(4) (levels 1,4,6) and IMR (levels 1-3). All noncalcified solid pulmonary nodules ≥ 4 mm identified by two radiologists in consensus served as the reference standard. Subsequently, nodule volume was measured with CAD software and compared to the reference consensus. The numbers of true-positives, false-positives and missed pulmonary nodules were evaluated as well as the sensitivity.Results: Median effective radiation dose was 2.2 mSv at routine dose and 1.2, 0.9 and 0.6 mSv at respectively 45%, 60% and 75% reduced dose. A total of 28 pulmonary nodules were included. With FBP at routine dose, 89% (25/28) of the nodules were correctly identified by CAD. This was similar at reduced dose levels with FBP, iDose(4) and IMR. CAD resulted in a median number of false-positives findings of 11 per scan with FBP at routine dose (93% of the CAD marks) increasing to 15 per scan with iDose(4) (95% of the CAD marks) and 26 per scan (96% of the CAD marks) with IMR at the lowest dose level.Conclusion: CAD can identify pulmonary nodules at submillisievert dose levels with FBP, hybrid and model-based IR. However, the number of false-positive findings increased using hybrid and especially model-based IR at submillisievert dose while dose reduction did not affect the number of false-positives with FBP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Finding the optimal dose reduction and iterative reconstruction level for coronary calcium scoring.
- Author
-
Willemink, Martin J., den Harder, Annemarie M., Foppen, Wouter, Schilham, Arnold M.R., Rienks, Rienk, Laufer, Eduard M., Nieman, Koen, de Jong, Pim A., Budde, Ricardo P.J., Nathoe, Hendrik M., and Leiner, Tim
- Abstract
Objective To assess the maximally achievable computed tomography (CT) dose reduction for coronary artery calcium (CAC) scoring with iterative reconstruction (IR) by using phantom-experiments and a systematical within-patient study. Methods Our local institutional review-board approved this study and informed consent was obtained from all participants. A phantom and patient study were conducted with 30 patients (23 men, median age 55.0 (52.0–56.0) years) who underwent 256-slice electrocardiogram-triggered CAC-scoring at four dose levels (routine, 60%, 40%, and 20%-dose) in a single session. Tube-voltage was 120 kVp, tube-current was lowered to achieve stated dose levels. Data were reconstructed with filtered back-projection (FBP) and three IR levels. Agatston, volume and mass scores were determined with validated software and compared using Wilcoxon signed ranks-tests. Subsequently, patient reclassification was analyzed. Results The phantom study showed that Agatston scores remained nearly stable with FBP between routine-dose and 40%-dose and increased substantially at lower dose. Twenty-three patients (77%) had coronary calcifications. For Agatston scoring, one 40%-dose and six 20%-dose FBP reconstructions were not interpretable due to noise. In contrast, with IR all reconstructions were interpretable. Median Agatston scores increased with FBP from 26.1 (5.2–192.2) at routine-dose to 60.5 (11.6–251.7) at 20% dose. However, IR lowered Agatston scores to 22.9 (5.9–195.5) at 20%-dose and strong IR (level 7) with Agatston reclassifications in 15%. Conclusion IR allows for CAC-scoring radiation dose reductions of up to 80% resulting in effective doses between 0.15 and 0.18 mSv. At these dose-levels, reclassification-rates remain within 15% if the highest IR-level is applied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Achievable dose reduction using iterative reconstruction for chest computed tomography: A systematic review.
- Author
-
den Harder, Annemarie M., Willemink, Martin J., de Ruiter, Quirina M.B., Schilham, Arnold M.R., Krestin, Gabriel P., Leiner, Tim, de Jong, Pim A., and Budde, Ricardo P.J.
- Subjects
- *
CHEST examination , *TOMOGRAPHY image quality , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *RADIATION doses , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *ALGORITHMS , *CHEST X rays , *COMPUTED tomography , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *COMPUTERS in medicine , *CONTRAST media - Abstract
Objectives: Iterative reconstruction (IR) allows for dose reduction with maintained image quality in CT imaging. In this systematic review the reported effective dose reductions for chest CT and the effects on image quality are investigated.Methods: A systematic search in PubMed and EMBASE was performed. Primary outcome was the reported local reference and reduced effective dose and secondary outcome was the image quality with IR. Both non contrast-enhanced and enhanced studies comparing reference dose with reduced dose were included.Results: 24 studies were included. The median number of patients per study was 66 (range 23-200) with in total 1806 patients. The median reported local reference dose of contrast-enhanced chest CT with FBP was 2.6 (range 1.5-21.8) mSv. This decreased to 1.4 (range 0.4-7.3) mSv at reduced dose levels using IR. With non contrast-enhanced chest CT the dose decreased from 3.4 (range 0.7-7.8) mSv to 0.9 (range 0.1-4.5) mSv. Objective mage quality and diagnostic confidence and acceptability remained the same or improved with IR compared to FBP in most studies while data on diagnostic accuracy was limited.Conclusion: Radiation dose can be reduced to less than 2 mSv for contrast-enhanced chest CT and non contrast-enhanced chest CT is possible at a submillisievert dose using IR algorithms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Coronary calcium scores are systematically underestimated at a large chest size: A multivendor phantom study.
- Author
-
Willemink, Martin J., Abramiuc, Bronislaw, den Harder, Annemarie M., van der Werf, Niels R., de Jong, Pim A., Budde, Ricardo P.J., Wildberger, Joachim E., Vliegenthart, Rozemarijn, Willems, Tineke P., Greuter, Marcel J.W., and Leiner, Tim
- Abstract
Objective To evaluate the effect of chest size on coronary calcium score (CCS) as assessed with new-generation CT systems from 4 major vendors. Methods An anthropomorphic, small-sized (300 × 200 mm) chest phantom containing 100 small calcifications (diameters, 0.5–2.0 mm) was evaluated with and without an extension ring on state-of-the-art CT systems from 4 vendors. The extension ring was used to mimic a patient with a large chest size (400 × 300 mm). Image acquisition was repeated 5 times with small translations and/or rotations. Routine clinical acquisition and reconstruction protocols for small and large patients were used. CCS was quantified as Agatston and mass scores with vendor software. Results The small-sized phantom resulted in median (interquartiles) Agatston scores of 10 (9–35), 136 (123–146), 34 (30–37), and 87 (85–89) for Philips, GE, Siemens, and Toshiba, respectively. Mass scores were 4 mg (3–9 mg), 23 mg (21–27 mg), 8 mg (8–9 mg), and 20 mg (20–20 mg), respectively. Adding the extension ring resulted in reduced Agatston scores for all vendors (17%–48%) and mass scores for 2 vendors (11%–49%). Median Agatston scores decreased to 9 (5–10), 79 (60–80), 27 (24–32), and 45 (29–53) units, and median mass scores remained similar for Philips at 4 mg (4–6 mg) and Siemens at 8 mg (7–8 mg) and decreased for the other vendors to 13 mg (11–14 mg) and 10 mg (8–13 mg), respectively. Conclusion This multivendor phantom study showed that CCS can be underestimated up to 50% (49%–66%) for Agatston scores and 49% (36%–59%) for mass scores at a larger chest size, which may be relevant for women and large patients. However, CCS underestimation by chest size differs considerably by vendor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Osteoarthritis in Pseudoxanthoma Elasticum Patients: An Explorative Imaging Study.
- Author
-
Gielis, Willem Paul, de Jong, Pim A., Bartstra, Jonas W., Foppen, Wouter, Spiering, Wilko, and den Harder, Annemarie M.
- Subjects
PATELLOFEMORAL joint ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging ,ANKLE ,INTERVERTEBRAL disk ,CARDIOVASCULAR system ,OSTEOARTHRITIS - Abstract
Pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE) is a systemic disease affecting the skin, eyes, and cardiovascular system of patients. Cardiovascular disease is associated with osteoarthritis (OA), which is the most common cause of joint pain. There is a lack of systematic investigations on joint manifestations in PXE in the literature. In this explorative study, we aimed to investigate whether patients with PXE are more at risk for developing osseous signs of OA. Patients with PXE and hospital controls with whole-body low-dose CT examinations available were included. OA was assessed using the OsteoArthritis Computed Tomography (OACT)-score, which is a 4-point Likert scale, in the acromioclavicular (AC), glenohumeral (GH), facet, hip, knee, and ankle joints. Additionally, intervertebral disc degeneration was scored. Data were analyzed using ordinal logistic regression adjusted for age, body mass index (BMI), and smoking status. In total, 106 PXE patients (age 56 (48–64), 42% males, BMI 25.3 (22.7–28.2)) and 87 hospital controls (age 55 (43–67), 46% males, BMI 26.0 (22.5–29.2)) were included. PXE patients were more likely to have a higher OA score for the AC joints (OR 2.00 (1.12–3.61)), tibiofemoral joint (OR 2.63 (1.40–5.07)), and patellofemoral joint (2.22 (1.18–4.24)). For the other joints, the prevalence and severity of OA did not differ significantly. This study suggests that patients with PXE are more likely to have structural OA of the knee and AC joints, which needs clinical confirmation in larger groups and further investigation into the mechanism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Emphysema quantification using chest CT: influence of radiation dose reduction and reconstruction technique.
- Author
-
den Harder, Annemarie M., de Boer, Erwin, Lagerweij, Suzanne J., Boomsma, Martijn F., Schilham, Arnold M. R., Willemink, Martin J., Milles, Julien, Leiner, Tim, Budde, Ricardo P. J., and de Jong, Pim A.
- Subjects
COMPUTED tomography ,RADIATION ,THORAX (Zoology) ,DENSITOMETRY ,RADIATION doses - Abstract
Background: Computed tomography (CT) emphysema quantification is affected by both radiation dose (i.e. image noise) and reconstruction technique. At reduced dose, filtered back projection (FBP) results in an overestimation of the amount of emphysema due to higher noise levels, while the use of iterative reconstruction (IR) can result in an underestimation due to reduced noise. The objective of this study was to determine the influence of dose reduction and hybrid IR (HIR) or model-based IR (MIR) on CT emphysema quantification. Methods: Twenty-two patients underwent inspiratory chest CT scan at routine radiation dose and at 45%, 60% and 75% reduced radiation dose. Acquisitions were reconstructed with FBP, HIR and MIR. Emphysema was quantified using the 15th percentile of the attenuation curve and the percentage of voxels below -950 HU. To determine whether the use of a different percentile or HU threshold is more accurate at reduced dose levels and with IR, additional measurements were performed using different percentiles and HU thresholds to determine the optimal combination. Results: Dose reduction resulted in a significant overestimation of emphysema, while HIR and MIR resulted in an underestimation. Lower HU thresholds with FBP at reduced dose and higher HU thresholds with HIR and MIR resulted in emphysema percentages comparable to the reference. The 15th percentile quantification method showed similar results as the HU threshold method. Conclusions: This within-patients study showed that CT emphysema quantification is significantly affected by dose reduction and IR. This can potentially be solved by adapting commonly used thresholds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Computed tomography image quality of aortic stents in patients with aortic coarctation: a multicentre evaluation.
- Author
-
Boccalini, Sara, den Harder, Annemarie M., Witsenburg, Maarten, Breur, Johannes P. J. M., Krestin, Gabriel P., van Beynum, Ingrid M., Attrach, Mohamed, Stagnaro, Nicola, Marasini, Maurizio, de Jong, Pim A., Leiner, Tim, and Budde, Ricardo P. J.
- Subjects
COMPUTED tomography ,SURGICAL stents ,AORTIC coarctation ,IMAGE quality analysis ,X-rays - Abstract
Background: Stents are commonly used to treat aortic coarctation. The objective of this study was to evaluate the post-implantation computed tomography (CT) image quality of different stent types used to treat aortic coarctation. Methods: Adult and paediatric patients with stent-treated aortic coarctation who underwent contrast-enhanced CT were retrospectively included from three tertiary care centres. CT scans were subjectively scored for image quality using a 4-point scale (1 = unacceptable; 2 = poor; 3 = good; 4 = excellent). Furthermore, the amount of stent-induced blooming artefacts was measured as the percentage of the difference between outer and inner stent diameters over the outer stent diameter. Results: A total of 35 children and 34 adults implanted with 71 stents of six different types were included. The most commonly used stent type was the Cheatham Platinum stent (52 stents, 73%). The subjective image quality of the Cheatham Platinum stents was moderate with a score of 2.0±0.8 (mean ± standard deviation) in children and 2.3±0.6 in adults. The image quality in patients with Formula stents was 2.3±1.2. The Cheatham Platinum stents induced 34–48% blooming, the Formula stents 44–55%. The image quality in patients with the less commonly used Atrium Advanta V12, IntraStent, AndraStent and Palmaz stents was scored 3 (good) to 4 (excellent) with less blooming. The electrocardiographic gating and tube voltage (kVp) did not affect image quality. Conclusions: There is a substantial variation in CT image quality and blooming artefacts for different stent types used to treat aortic coarctation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Intracranial Arterial Calcification: Prevalence, Risk Factors, and Consequences: JACC Review Topic of the Week.
- Author
-
Bartstra, Jonas W, van den Beukel, Tim C, Van Hecke, Wim, Mali, Willem P T M, Spiering, Wilko, Koek, Huiberdina L, Hendrikse, Jeroen, de Jong, Pim A, and den Harder, Annemarie M
- Subjects
- *
ARTERIES , *INTRACRANIAL arterial diseases , *CALCINOSIS , *DISEASE prevalence , *COMPUTED tomography , *NEURORADIOLOGY - Abstract
Intracranial large and small arterial calcifications are a common incidental finding on computed tomography imaging in the general population. Here we provide an overview of the published reports on prevalence of intracranial arterial calcifications on computed tomography imaging and histopathology in relation to risk factors and clinical outcomes. We performed a systematic search in Medline, with a search filter using synonyms for computed tomography scanning, (histo)pathology, different intracranial arterial beds, and calcification. We found that intracranial calcifications are a frequent finding in all arterial beds with the highest prevalence in the intracranial internal carotid artery. In general, prevalence increases with age. Longitudinal studies on calcification progression and intervention studies are warranted to investigate the possible causal role of calcification on clinical outcomes. This might open up new therapeutic directions in stroke and dementia prevention and the maintenance of the healthy brain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.