Abstract

This study assessed the image quality and diagnostic accuracy in determining disease activity of the terminal ileum of the reduced-dose computed tomography enterography using model-based iterative reconstruction in pediatric patients with Crohn’s disease (CD). Eighteen patients were prospectively enrolled and allocated to the standard-dose (SD) and reduced-dose (RD) computed tomography enterography (CTE) groups (n = 9 per group). Image quality, reader confidence in interpreting bowel findings, accuracy in determining active CD in the terminal ileum, and radiation dose were evaluated. Objective image quality did not show intergroup differences, except for image sharpness. Although reader confidence in detecting mural stratification, ulcer, and perienteric fat stranding of the RD-CTE were inferior to SD-CTE, RD-CTE correctly diagnosed active disease in all patients. The mean values of radiation dose metrics (SD-CTE vs. RD-CTE) were 4.3 versus 0.74 mGy, 6.1 versus 1.1 mGy, 211.9 versus 34.5 mGy∙cm, and 4.4 versus 0.7 mSv mGy∙cm for CTDIvol, size-specific dose estimation, dose-length product, and effective dose, respectively. RD-CTE showed comparable diagnostic accuracy to SD-CTE in determining active disease of the terminal ileum in pediatric CD patients. However, image quality and reader confidence in detecting ulcer and perienteric fat stranding was compromised.

Highlights

  • Inflammatory bowel disease is characterized by chronic and debilitating inflammatory episodes of the gastrointestinal tract

  • Three patients allocated to the RD group were excluded from the study due to failure to assess the terminal ileum on endoscopy

  • The RD-computed tomography enterography (CTE) using 80 kVp combined with Model-based iterative reconstruction (MBIR) achieved > 80% dose reduction compared with SD-CTE while maintaining comparable diagnostic accuracy in detecting active small bowel Crohn’s disease (CD) in the terminal ileum

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Summary

Introduction

Inflammatory bowel disease is characterized by chronic and debilitating inflammatory episodes of the gastrointestinal tract. Several studies have evaluated the feasibility and diagnostic accuracy of reduced-dose CTE (RD-CTE) in adult and pediatric patients by applying low kVp and iterative ­reconstruction[10,11,12,13,14,15,16]. These studies achieved a significant dose reduction of approximately 30%–70% with acceptable image quality and diagnostic accuracy in detecting bowel abnormalities. The purpose of the current study was to assess the feasibility, image quality, and diagnostic accuracy in determining disease activity of the terminal ileum of the RD-CTE using low kVp and MBIR techniques in pediatric CD patients

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