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Prospectively ECG-triggered high-pitch coronary CT angiography at 70 kVp with 30 mL contrast agent: An intraindividual comparison with sequential scanning at 120 kVp with 60 mL contrast agent

Abstract Purpose To investigate image quality, radiation dose, and diagnostic efficiency of prospectively ECG-triggered high-pitch coronary CT angiography (CCTA) at 70 kVp with 30 mL contrast agent intra-individually compared with routine CCTA protocol. Materials and methods One hundred and thirty e...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:European journal of radiology 2017-05, Vol.90, p.97-105
Main Authors: Wang, Wei, Zhao, Yan E, Qi, Li, Li, Xie, Zhou, Chang Sheng, Zhang, Long Jiang, Lu, Guang Ming
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Abstract Purpose To investigate image quality, radiation dose, and diagnostic efficiency of prospectively ECG-triggered high-pitch coronary CT angiography (CCTA) at 70 kVp with 30 mL contrast agent intra-individually compared with routine CCTA protocol. Materials and methods One hundred and thirty eight patients with suspected coronary artery disease, body mass index (BMI) ≤ 25 kg/m2 and heart rate (HR) ≤ 70 beats per minute (bpm) underwent prospectively ECG-triggered high-pitch CCTA at 70 kVp and 30 mL contrast agent (protocol A) and prospectively ECG-triggered sequential scanning at 120 kVp and 60 mL contrast medium (protocol B). Objective and subjective image quality, radiation doses, and diagnostic accuracy were evaluated and compared between the two protocols. Results Higher CT attenuation, higher noise, lower signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) and lower contrast-to-noise ratios (CNRs) were found in protocol A than in protocol B ( P < 0.001). However, image quality of protocol A were diagnostic. In patients with BMI < 23 kg/m2 or HR < 60 bpm, subjective image quality scores of some coronary arteries in protocol A were not significantly different from protocol B ( P > 0.05). Effective dose in protocol A has reduced by 96.7% compared with protocol B ( P < 0.001). No significant differences were found for diagnostic accuracy between the two protocols on a per-segment ( P = 0.513), per-vessel ( P = 0.317) and per-patient ( P = 0.125) basis. Conclusions Prospectively ECG-triggered high-pitch CCTA at 70 kVp with 30 mL contrast agent can reduce radiation dose but maintain image quality and high diagnostic accuracy in a selected, non-obese population.
ISSN:0720-048X
DOI:10.1016/j.ejrad.2017.02.020