Evaluation of heavily calcified vessels with coronary CT angiography: comparison of iterative and filtered back projection image reconstruction.

Matthias Renker, John W Nance, U Joseph Schoepf, Terrence X O'Brien, Peter L Zwerner, Mathias Meyer, J Matthias Kerl, Ralf W Bauer, Christian Fink, Thomas J Vogl, Thomas Henzler

Heart and Vascular Center, Medical University of South Carolina, Ashley River Tower, 25 Courtenay Dr, Charleston, SC 29425-2260, USA.

Journal Article: Radiology (impact factor: 6.34). 06/2011; 260(2):390-9. DOI: 10.1148/radiol.11103574

Abstract

To prospectively compare traditional filtered back projection (FBP) and iterative image reconstruction for the evaluation of heavily calcified arteries with coronary computed tomography (CT) angiography.
The study had institutional review board approval and was HIPAA compliant. Written informed consent was obtained from all patients. Fifty-five consecutive patients (35 men, 20 women; mean age, 58 years ± 12 [standard deviation]) with Agatston scores of at least 400 underwent coronary CT angiography and cardiac catheterization. Image data were reconstructed with both FBP and iterative reconstruction techniques with corresponding cardiac algorithms. Image noise and subjective image quality were compared. To objectively assess the effect of FBP and iterative reconstruction on blooming artifacts, volumes of circumscribed calcifications were measured with dedicated volume analysis software. FBP and iterative reconstruction series were independently evaluated for coronary artery stenosis greater than 50%, and their diagnostic accuracy was compared, with cardiac catheterization as the reference standard. Statistical analyses included paired t tests, Kruskal-Wallis analysis of variance, and a modified McNemar test.
Image noise measured significantly lower (P = .011-.035) with iterative reconstruction instead of FBP. Image quality was rated significantly higher (P = .031 and .042) with iterative reconstruction series than with FBP. Calcification volumes measured significantly lower (P = .019 and .026) with iterative reconstruction (44.3 mm(3) ± 64.7 and 46.2 mm(3) ± 68.8) than with FBP (54.5 mm(3) ± 69.5 and 56.3 mm(3) ± 72.5). Iterative reconstruction significantly improved some measures of per-segment diagnostic accuracy of coronary CT angiography for the detection of significant stenosis compared with FBP (accuracy: 95.9% vs 91.8%, P = .0001; specificity: 95.8% vs 91.2%, P = .0001; positive predictive value: 76.9% vs 61.1%, P = .0001).
Iterative reconstruction reduces image noise and blooming artifacts from calcifications, leading to improved diagnostic accuracy of coronary CT angiography in patients with heavily calcified coronary arteries.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

58 years ± 12 [standard deviation]
 
Agatston scores
 
cardiac catheterization
 
consecutive patients
 
coronary artery stenosis greater
 
coronary computed tomography
 
coronary CT angiography
 
diagnostic accuracy
 
Image data
 
Image noise
 
Image quality
 
iterative image reconstruction
 
iterative reconstruction series
 
iterative reconstruction techniques
 
Kruskal-Wallis analysis
 
paired t tests
 
per-segment diagnostic accuracy
 
significant stenosis
 
subjective image quality
 
volume analysis software