Ultralow Dose CT Imaging for Navigated Skull Base Surgery Using ASIR and MBIR-2D and 3D Image Quality

Objective : To evaluate 2D and 3D image quality of ultralow dose computed tomography images for navigated skull base surgery using adaptive statistical iterative reconstruction (ASIR) and model-based iterative reconstruction (MBIR) compared with standard filtered back projection (FBP). Study Design...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of Neurological Surgery Part B: Skull Base Vol. 75; no. S 02
Main Authors Widmann, Gerlig, Schullian, P., Hoermann, R., Gassner, E. M., Riechelmann, H., Bale, R., Puelacher, W.
Format Conference Proceeding Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 17.06.2014
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Summary:Objective : To evaluate 2D and 3D image quality of ultralow dose computed tomography images for navigated skull base surgery using adaptive statistical iterative reconstruction (ASIR) and model-based iterative reconstruction (MBIR) compared with standard filtered back projection (FBP). Study Design : Cadaver study. Material and Methods : A human cadaver head was scanned using a high resolution reference protocol for navigated skull base surgery (CTDIvol 30.48 mGy) and a series of five ultralow dose protocols (3.48, 2.19, 0.82, 0.44, and 0.22 mGy). Subjective image quality of blinded 2D axial and 3D images using FBP and ASIR-50, ASIR-100, and MBIR was evaluated by three observers using top-down scoring. Statistical analyze was performed per protocol and reconstruction including multiple Bonferoni testing ( p = 0.05). Results : 2D images: There was no significant difference between the FBP reference 30.48 mGy and the ultralow dose protocol ASIR-50 and 100 at 3.48 mGy, ASIR-100 and MBIR at 2.19, ASIR-100 and MBIR at 0.82, and MBIR at 0.44 mGy. MBIR at 3.48 mGy scored significantly better than the FBP reference ( p = 0.004). 3D images: There was no significant difference between the FBP reference and the ultralow dose protocols except FBP and ASIR-50 at 0.44 mGy ( p = 0.007, p = 0.013) and ASIR-50 at 0.22 mGy ( p = 0.019). Conclusions : ASIR-100 and MBIR significantly improve subjective image quality of ultralow dose imaging and may allow dose reductions of more than 90%.
ISSN:2193-6331
2193-634X
DOI:10.1055/s-0034-1384131