Abstract

In photon-counting detector CT (PCD-CT), coronary artery calcium scoring (CACS) can be performed using virtual non-contrast (VNC) series derived from coronary CT angiography (CCTA) datasets. Our study analyzed image characteristics of VNC series in terms of the efficacy of virtual iodine "removal" and image noise to determine whether the prerequisites for calcium quantification were satisfied. We analyzed 38 patients who had undergone non-enhanced CT followed by CCTA on a PCD-CT. VNC reconstructions were performed at different settings and algorithms (conventional VNCConv; PureCalcium VNCPC). Virtual iodine "removal" was investigated by comparing histograms of heart volumes. Noise was assessed within the left ventricular cavity. Calcium was quantified on the true non-contrast (TNC) and all VNC series. The histograms were comparable for TNC and all VNC. Image noise between TNC and all VNC differed slightly but significantly. VNCConv CACS showed a significant underestimation regardless of the reconstruction setting, while VNCPC CACS were comparable to TNC. Correlations between TNC and VNC were excellent, with a higher predictive accuracy for VNCPC. In conclusion, the iodine contrast can be effectively subtracted from CCTA datasets. The remaining VNC series satisfy the requirements for CACS, yielding results with excellent correlation compared to TNC-based CACS and high predicting accuracy.

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