4.5 Article

Low-dose MDCT: evaluation of the impact of systematic tube current reduction and sparse sampling on quantitative paraspinal muscle assessment

Journal

QUANTITATIVE IMAGING IN MEDICINE AND SURGERY
Volume 11, Issue 7, Pages 3042-3050

Publisher

AME PUBL CO
DOI: 10.21037/qims-20-1220

Keywords

Multi; detector computed tomography (MDCT); dose reduction; muscle composition; paraspinal muscle; sarcopenia

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [432290010]

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This study evaluated the performance of different methods of radiation dose reduction for paravertebral muscle composition assessment using MDCT scans. Results showed that sparse sampling approach may be more promising and potentially superior to tube current reduction for dose reduction in assessing the composition of the paravertebral musculature.
Background: Wasting disease entities like cachexia or sarcopenia are associated with a decreasing muscle mass and changing muscle composition. For valid and reliable disease detection and monitoring diagnostic techniques offering quantitative musculature assessment are needed. Multi-detector computed tomography (MDCT) is a broadly available imaging modality allowing for muscle composition analysis. A major disadvantage of using MDCT for muscle composition assessment is the radiation exposure. In this study we evaluated the performance of different methods of radiation dose reduction for paravertebral muscle composition assessment. Methods: MDCT scans of eighteen subjects (6 males, age: 71.5 +/- 15.9 years, and 12 females, age: 71.0 +/- 8.9 years) were retrospectively simulated as if they were acquired at 50%, 10%, 5%, and 3% of the original X-ray tube current or number of projections (i.e., sparse sampling). Images were reconstructed with a statistical iterative reconstruction (SIR) algorithm. Paraspinal muscles (psoas and erector spinae muscles) at the level of L4 were segmented in the original-dose images. Segmentations were superimposed on all low-dose scans and muscle density (MD) extracted. Results: Sparse sampling derived mean MD showed no significant changes (P=0.57 and P=0.22) down to 5% of the original projections in the erector spinae and psoas muscles, respectively. All virtually reduced tube current series showed significantly different (P>0.05) mean MD in the psoas and erector spinae muscles as compared to the original dose except for the images of 5% of the original tube current in the erector spinae muscle. Conclusions: Our findings demonstrated the possibility of considerable radiation dose reduction using MDCT scans for assessing the composition of the paravertebral musculature. The sparse sampling approach seems to be promising and a potentially superior technique for dose reduction as compared to tube current reduction.

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