AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to assess if a software-based automated tube potential selection (ATPS) for CT neck scans could lower radiation doses while maintaining image quality compared to a standard 120-kV protocol.
  • The research involved 364 patients, with the ATPS group showing a significant reduction in radiation dose (average DLP 259 vs 350 mGy × cm) while not compromising the subjective image quality (average score: 4.56 vs 4.61).
  • Results indicated that lower tube potentials (especially 100 kV) were correlated with patient BMI, and despite differences in attenuation and SNR, overall image quality remained consistent between both methods.

Article Abstract

Objective: The objective of our study was to investigate whether the use of a software-based automated tube potential selection (ATPS) CT neck protocol can result in radiation dose reduction as compared with a set 120-kV protocol without a statistically significant reduction in image quality.

Materials And Methods: Three hundred sixty-four patients (median age, 52 years) underwent CT of the neck. Group 1 (n = 320) underwent CT with ATPS with 80, 100, or 120 kV. Group 2 (n = 44) was examined with the standard CT protocol at 120 kV. Attenuation, image background noise, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), dose-length product (DLP), volume CT dose index (CTDIvol), body mass index (BMI [weight in kilograms divided by the square of height in meters]), and subjective image quality (5-point Likert scale, two readers in consensus) were analyzed.

Results: A tube potential of 100 kV was selected in 279 patients, 120 kV in 40 patients, and 80 kV in one patient of the ATPS group. A significant correlation was found for selected tube potential and BMI (80 kV, BMI = 20.4; 100 kV, mean BMI = 24.2; 120 kV, BMI = 28.6; r = 0.28, p < 0.01). The average radiation dose was significantly lower with ATPS activated than with the standard protocol (mean DLP, 259 vs 350 mGy × cm, respectively). Background noise did not differ between groups 1 and 2 at the levels of the mandibular angle and the upper mediastinum; however, attenuation and SNR increased significantly with lower tube potential settings. Subjective image quality did not suffer (mean image quality score: ATPS protocol vs standard protocol, 4.56 vs 4.61, respectively; p > 0.05) with good interobserver agreement (κ > 0.56).

Conclusion: ATPS allows significant dose savings for CT of the neck compared with a standard protocol that uses a fixed 120-kV setting without a statistically significant reduction in image quality.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2214/AJR.14.12975DOI Listing

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