Abstract

The purposes of this study were to evaluate prospective adjustment of dose settings in pediatric 16-MDCT by use of computer-simulated images in a patient image gallery and to compare the dose reduction achieved with that of standard pediatric protocols. The image gallery consisted of images from weight-dependent sample examinations performed with varied simulated tube current-exposure time settings. The scanning parameters prospectively chosen on the basis of the image quality of the image gallery were used for 30 16-MDCT examinations (chest, n = 15; abdomen, n = 8; pelvis, n = 7) of 22 children (14 boys, eight girls; mean age, 6.8 +/- 5.8 years; mean body weight, 26.7 +/- 19.6 kg). Three blinded radiologists used a 4-point grading scale to rate the overall image quality of the image gallery and the 16-MDCT scans. Objective and subjective image quality was assessed for the simulated and actual CT scans. The concordance correlation coefficient (K) was determined. There was mainly moderate concordance with regard to objective (chest, K = 0.69; abdomen, K = 0.33; pelvis, K = 0.55) and subjective (chest soft-tissue window, kappa coefficient [kappa] = 0.00; chest lung window, kappa = 0.53; abdomen, kappa = 1.00; pelvis, kappa = 0.48) analysis of image gallery compared with actual 16-MDCT examinations. Compared with use of previous weight-adapted pediatric standard protocols, use of an image gallery resulted in further dose reduction for abdominal and pelvic CT but not for thoracic CT. A patient image gallery can be used as a basis for pediatric 16-MDCT examinations. The gallery provides a preexamination overview of expected image quality. Radiation exposure can be optimized with regard to patient weight and the image quality needed to answer the clinical question.

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