Abstract

To evaluate the image quality of routine diagnostic images generated from a novel detector-based spectral detector CT (SDCT) and compare it with CT images obtained from a conventional scanner with an energy-integrating detector (Brilliance iCT), Routine diagnostic (conventional/polyenergetic) images are non-material-specific images that resemble single-energy images obtained at the same radiation, METHODS: ACR guideline-based phantom evaluations were performed on both SDCT and iCT for CT adult body protocol. Retrospective analysis was performed on 50 abdominal CT scans from each scanner. Identical ROIs were placed at multiple locations in the abdomen and attenuation, noise, SNR, and CNR were measured. Subjective image quality analysis on a 5-point Likert scale was performed by 2 readers for enhancement, noise, and image quality. On phantom studies, SDCT images met the ACR requirements for CT number and deviation, CNR and effective radiation dose. In patients, the qualitative scores were significantly higher for the SDCT than the iCT, including enhancement (4.79±0.38 vs. 4.60±0.51, p=0.005), noise (4.63±0.42 vs. 4.29±0.50, p=0.000), and quality (4.85±0.32, vs. 4.57±0.50, p=0.000). The SNR was higher in SDCT than iCT for liver (7.4±4.2 vs. 7.2±5.3, p=0.662), spleen (8.6±4.1 vs. 7.4±3.5, p=0.152), kidney (11.1±6.3 vs. 8.7±5.0, p=0.033), pancreas (6.90±3.45 vs 6.11±2.64, p=0.303), aorta (14.2±6.2 vs. 11.0±4.9, p=0.007), but was slightly lower in lumbar-vertebra (7.7±4.2 vs. 7.8±4.5, p=0.937). The CNR of the SDCT was also higher than iCT for all abdominal organs. Image quality of routine diagnostic images from the SDCT is comparable to images of a conventional CT scanner with energy-integrating detectors, making it suitable for diagnostic purposes.

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