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  • Title: Virtual monochromatic images for coronary artery imaging with a spectral photon-counting CT in comparison to dual-layer CT systems: a phantom and a preliminary human study.
    Author: Greffier J, Si-Mohamed SA, Lacombe H, Labour J, Djabli D, Boccalini S, Varasteh M, Villien M, Yagil Y, Erhard K, Boussel L, Beregi JP, Douek PC.
    Journal: Eur Radiol; 2023 Aug; 33(8):5476-5488. PubMed ID: 36920517.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the quality of virtual monochromatic images (VMIs) from spectral photon-counting CT (SPCCT) and two energy-integrating detector dual-energy CT (EID-DECT) scanners from the same manufacturer, for the coronary lumen. METHODS: A 21-cm section of the Mercury v4.0 phantom was scanned using a cardiac CT protocol. VMIs from 40 to 90 keV were reconstructed using high-resolution (HR) parameters for EID-DECT and SPCCT (CB and HRB kernels at 0.67 mm slice thickness, respectively). Ultra-high-resolution (UHR) parameters were used in addition to SPCCT (detailed-2 kernel, 0.43 mm slice thickness). Noise-power-spectrum (NPS), task-based transfer function (TTF), and detectability index (d') were computed for 2-mm-diameter lumen detection. In consensus, two radiologists analyzed the quality of the images from 8 patients who underwent coronary CTA on both CT systems. RESULTS: For all keV images, fpeak, f50, and d' were higher with SPCCT. The fpeak and f50 were higher with UHR-SPCCT with greater noise and lower d' compared to those of the HR-SPCCT images. Noise magnitude was constant for all energy levels (keV) with both systems, and lower with HR images, and d' decreased as keV decreased. Subjective analysis showed greater lumen sharpness and overall quality for HR and UHR-SPCCT images using all keV, with a greater difference at low keV compared to HR-EID-DECT images. CONCLUSION: HR and UHR-SPCCT images gave greater detectability of the coronary lumen for 40 to 90 keV VMIs compared to two EID-DECT systems, with benefits of higher lumen sharpness and overall quality. KEY POINTS: • Compared with 2 dual-energy CT systems, spectral photon-counting CT (SPCCT) improved spatial resolution, noise texture, noise magnitude, and detectability of the coronary lumen. • Use of ultra-high-resolution parameters with SPCCT improved spatial resolution and noise texture and provided high detectability of the coronary lumen, despite an increase in noise magnitude. • In eight patients, radiologists found greater overall image quality with SPCCT for all virtual monochromatic images with a greater difference at low keV, compared with dual-energy CT systems.
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