Effect of radiation dose reduction and iterative reconstruction on computer-aided detection of pulmonary nodules: Intra-individual comparison

  • Annemarie M. Den Harder*
  • , Martin J. Willemink
  • , Robbert W. Van Hamersvelt
  • , Evert-Jan P A Vonken
  • , Julien Milles
  • , Arnold M R Schilham
  • , Jan Willem Lammers
  • , Pim A. De Jong
  • , Tim Leiner
  • , Ricardo P J Budde
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Objective To evaluate the effect of radiation dose reduction and iterative reconstruction (IR) on the performance of computer-aided detection (CAD) for pulmonary nodules. Methods In this prospective study twenty-five patients were included who were scanned for pulmonary nodule follow-up. Image acquisition was performed at routine dose and three reduced dose levels in a single session by decreasing mAs-values with 45%, 60% and 75%. Tube voltage was fixed at 120 kVp for patients ≥80 kg and 100 kVp for patients 4 (levels 1,4,6) and IMR (levels 1-3). All noncalcified solid pulmonary nodules ≥4 mm identified by two radiologists in consensus served as the reference standard. Subsequently, nodule volume was measured with CAD software and compared to the reference consensus. The numbers of true-positives, false-positives and missed pulmonary nodules were evaluated as well as the sensitivity. Results Median effective radiation dose was 2.2 mSv at routine dose and 1.2, 0.9 and 0.6 mSv at respectively 45%, 60% and 75% reduced dose. A total of 28 pulmonary nodules were included. With FBP at routine dose, 89% (25/28) of the nodules were correctly identified by CAD. This was similar at reduced dose levels with FBP, iDose4 and IMR. CAD resulted in a median number of false-positives findings of 11 per scan with FBP at routine dose (93% of the CAD marks) increasing to 15 per scan with iDose4 (95% of the CAD marks) and 26 per scan (96% of the CAD marks) with IMR at the lowest dose level. Conclusion CAD can identify pulmonary nodules at submillisievert dose levels with FBP, hybrid and model-based IR. However, the number of false-positive findings increased using hybrid and especially model-based IR at submillisievert dose while dose reduction did not affect the number of false-positives with FBP.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)346-351
Number of pages6
JournalEuropean Journal of Radiology
Volume85
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2016

Keywords

  • Chest CT
  • Computer-aided detection
  • Iterative reconstruction
  • Pulmonary nodules

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