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Fat quantification in dual-layer detector spectral computed tomography : experimental development and first in-patient validation

Authors :
Molwitz, Isabel
Campbell, Graeme Michael
Yamamura, Jin
Knopp, Tobias
Tödter, Klaus
Fischer, Roland F.
Wang, Zhiyue Jerry
Busch, Alina
Ozga, Ann-Kathrin
Zhang, Shuo
Lindner, Thomas
Sevecke, Florian
Grosser, Mirco
Adam, Gerhard
Szwargulski, Patryk
Molwitz, Isabel
Campbell, Graeme Michael
Yamamura, Jin
Knopp, Tobias
Tödter, Klaus
Fischer, Roland F.
Wang, Zhiyue Jerry
Busch, Alina
Ozga, Ann-Kathrin
Zhang, Shuo
Lindner, Thomas
Sevecke, Florian
Grosser, Mirco
Adam, Gerhard
Szwargulski, Patryk
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Objectives Fat quantification by dual-energy computed tomography (DECT) provides contrast-independent objective results, for example, on hepatic steatosis or muscle quality as parameters of prognostic relevance. To date, fat quantification has only been developed and used for source-based DECT techniques as fast kVp-switching CT or dual-source CT, which require a prospective selection of the dual-energy imaging mode. It was the purpose of this study to develop a material decomposition algorithm for fat quantification in phantoms and validate it in vivo for patient liver and skeletal muscle using a dual-layer detector-based spectral CT (dlsCT), which automatically generates spectral information with every scan. Materials and Methods For this feasibility study, phantoms were created with 0%, 5%, 10%, 25%, and 40% fat and 0, 4.9, and 7.0 mg/mL iodine, respectively. Phantom scans were performed with the IQon spectral CT (Philips, the Netherlands) at 120 kV and 140 kV and 3 T magnetic resonance (MR) (Philips, the Netherlands) chemical-shift relaxometry (MRR) and MR spectroscopy (MRS). Based on maps of the photoelectric effect and Compton scattering, 3-material decomposition was done for fat, iodine, and phantom material in the image space. After written consent, 10 patients (mean age, 55 ± 18 years; 6 men) in need of a CT staging were prospectively included. All patients received contrast-enhanced abdominal dlsCT scans at 120 kV and MR imaging scans for MRR. As reference tissue for the liver and the skeletal muscle, retrospectively available non-contrast-enhanced spectral CT data sets were used. Agreement between dlsCT and MR was evaluated for the phantoms, 3 hepatic and 2 muscular regions of interest per patient by intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) and Bland-Altman analyses. Results The ICC was excellent in the phantoms for both 120 kV and 140 kV (dlsCT vs MRR 0.98 [95% confidence interval (CI), 0.94-0.99]; dlsCT vs MRS 0.96 [95% CI, 0.87-0.99]) and in the skel

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1338136903
Document Type :
Electronic Resource