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Variability and accuracy of coronary CT angiography including use of iterative reconstruction algorithms for plaque burden assessment as compared with intravascular ultrasound-an ex vivo study.

Authors :
Stolzmann P
Schlett CL
Maurovich-Horvat P
Maehara A
Ma S
Scheffel H
Engel LC
Károlyi M
Mintz GS
Hoffmann U
Stolzmann, Paul
Schlett, Christopher L
Maurovich-Horvat, Pal
Maehara, Akiko
Ma, Shixin
Scheffel, Hans
Engel, Leif-Christopher
Károlyi, Mihály
Mintz, Gary S
Hoffmann, Udo
Source :
European Radiology; Oct2012, Vol. 22 Issue 10, p2067-2075, 9p
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

<bold>Objectives: </bold>To systematically assess inter-technique and inter-/intra-reader variability of coronary CT angiography (CTA) to measure plaque burden compared with intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) and to determine whether iterative reconstruction algorithms affect variability.<bold>Methods: </bold>IVUS and CTA data were acquired from nine human coronary arteries ex vivo. CT images were reconstructed using filtered back projection (FBPR) and iterative reconstruction algorithms: adaptive-statistical (ASIR) and model-based (MBIR). After co-registration of 284 cross-sections between IVUS and CTA, two readers manually delineated the cross-sectional plaque area in all images presented in random order.<bold>Results: </bold>Average plaque burden by IVUS was 63.7 ± 10.7% and correlated significantly with all CTA measurements (r = 0.45-0.52; P < 0.001), while CTA overestimated the burden by 10 ± 10%. There were no significant differences among FBPR, ASIR and MBIR (P > 0.05). Increased overestimation was associated with smaller plaques, eccentricity and calcification (P < 0.001). Reproducibility of plaque burden by CTA and IVUS datasets was excellent with a low mean intra-/inter-reader variability of <1/<4% for CTA and <0.5/<1% for IVUS respectively (P < 0.05) with no significant difference between CT reconstruction algorithms (P > 0.05).<bold>Conclusion: </bold>In ex vivo coronary arteries, plaque burden by coronary CTA had extremely low inter-/intra-reader variability and correlated significantly with IVUS measurements. Accuracy as well as reader reliability were independent of CT image reconstruction algorithm.<bold>Key Points: </bold>• IVUS is deemed the gold standard in-vivo coronary plaque assessment • But coronary CT angiography findings correlate strongly with IVUS results • Coronary CT angiography now allows plaque quantification close to IVUS • Iterative image reconstruction algorithms do not alter accuracy or reproducibility • Plaque quantification is more challenging in smaller eccentric calcified lesions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09387994
Volume :
22
Issue :
10
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
European Radiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
104364721
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00330-012-2464-8