4.3 Article

Patient-tailored Contrast Delivery Protocols for Computed Tomography Coronary Angiography Lower Contrast Dose and Better Image Quality

Journal

JOURNAL OF THORACIC IMAGING
Volume 36, Issue 6, Pages 353-359

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/RTI.0000000000000593

Keywords

computed tomography angiography; computed tomography coronary angiography; patient-tailored contrast delivery; contrast enhancement; iodine delivery rate

Funding

  1. ITEA3 project: PARTNER [16017]

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The study aimed to evaluate a patient-tailored contrast delivery protocol for CTCA and found that adjusting the IDR can improve luminal attenuation and significantly reduce the total iodine load. Additionally, the peak height of the test-bolus scan was associated with luminal attenuation in certain cases.
Purpose: The first objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of a patient-tailored contrast delivery protocol for coronary computed tomography angiography (CTCA), in terms of diagnostic coronary attenuation and total iodine load (TIL), by adjusting the iodine delivery rate (IDR) via dilution for body weight and tube voltage (kV), as compared with a protocol with a fixed bolus of contrast in a clinical setting. The secondary objective was to assess the association between the test-bolus data and luminal attenuation in CTCA. Materials and Methods: Patients who underwent CTCA with fixed IDR contrast delivery (cohort 1) or with IDR adjusted for body weight and kV settings (70 to 120 kV) (cohort 2) were included, and compared for intravascular luminal attenuation and TIL. The association between intravascular luminal attenuation and test-bolus scan data was investigated with linear regression. Results: In cohort 1 (176 patients), the mean luminal attenuation differed markedly between kV categories, whereas in cohort 2 (154 patients), there were no marked differences. The mean TIL reduced significantly (20.1 +/- 1.2 g in cohort 1, 17.7 +/- 3.0 g in cohort 2, P<0.001). The peak height of the test-bolus scan was independently associated with luminal attenuation in the ascending aorta, with a 0.58 HU increase per HU peak-height increase (SE=0.18, P<0.001). Conclusion: Clinical implementation of a patient-tailored contrast delivery protocol for CTCA, adjusted for body weight and kV, improves luminal attenuation and significantly reduces the TIL. The peak height of the test-bolus scan is associated with luminal attenuation in the ascending aorta in the CTCA scan.

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