Optimization of paranasal sinus CT procedure: Ultra-low dose CT as a roadmap for pre-functional endoscopic sinus surgery

•CT PNS has become a well-established preoperative diagnostic tool providing a mandatory ‘roadmap’ for FESS.•The phantom study was performed first, in order to determine protocols to be investigated in the patient study.•A standard CT PNS protocol can be replaced with ultra-low dose protocol. To ass...

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Published inPhysica medica Vol. 78; pp. 195 - 200
Main Authors Diklić, Ana, Valković Zujić, Petra, Šegota, Doris, Dundara Debeljuh, Dea, Jurković, Slaven, Brambilla, Marco, Kalra, Mannudeep K.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.10.2020
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Summary:•CT PNS has become a well-established preoperative diagnostic tool providing a mandatory ‘roadmap’ for FESS.•The phantom study was performed first, in order to determine protocols to be investigated in the patient study.•A standard CT PNS protocol can be replaced with ultra-low dose protocol. To assess image quality and radiation dose associated with ultra-low dose CT protocol for patients with benign paranasal sinus diseases undergoing functional endoscopic surgery (FESS). We scanned the head portion of Alderson RANDO phantom on a second generation, dual-source, multidetector-row CT scanner (Siemens Definition Flash) using standard-dose and five low-dose protocols. Two radiologists assessed the image quality for each protocol to determine best ultra-low-dose protocols for imaging patients with benign paranasal sinus diseases undergoing FESS. The ultra-low-dose CT protocols were then used for scanning. Thereafter, 40 adult patients (age range 18–54 years, M:F 23:17) were scanned with the four low dose scanning protocols (10 patients per protocol). On both transverse and coronal reformatted CT images, two radiologists assessed visibility of key anatomic landmarks for FESS on a 2-point scale (1 = clear and complete visualization; 2 = suboptimal visualization). Data were analyzed with descriptive statistics and Cohen’s kappa coefficient for interobserver agreement. In phantom study, the lowest dose scan protocol (CTDIvol 2.1 mGy, 70 kV, 75 mAs) was unacceptable due to poor image quality. For patient studies, both radiologists gave acceptable image quality scores for ultra-low-dose scan protocol with axial scan mode, automatic tube potential selection and tube current modulation (CTDIvol 2.2 mGy; DLP 22.9 mGy.cm) with up to 60% lower dose compared to prior standard-dose CT (CTDIvol 5.3 mGy; DLP 73.5 mGy.cm). Ultra-low-dose CT protocol provides sufficient image quality for scanning patients undergoing functional endoscopic surgery for benign paranasal sinus diseases.
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ISSN:1120-1797
1724-191X
DOI:10.1016/j.ejmp.2020.09.014