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Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate a preclinical spectral photon-counting CT (SPCCT) prototype compared to conventional CT for pulmonary imaging. A custom-made lung phantom, including nodules of different sizes and shapes, was scanned with a preclinical SPCCT and a conventional CT in standard and high-resolution (HR-CT) mode. Volume estimation was evaluated by linear regression. Shape similarity was evaluated with the Dice similarity coefficient. Spatial resolution was investigated via MTF for each imaging system. In-vivo rabbit lung images from the SPCCT system were subjectively reviewed. Evaluating the volume estimation, linear regression showed best results for the SPCCT compared to CT and HR-CT with a root mean squared error of 21.3 mm3, 28.5 mm3 and 26.4 mm3 for SPCCT, CT and HR-CT, respectively. The Dice similarity coefficient was superior for SPCCT throughout nodule shapes and all nodule sizes (mean, SPCCT: 0.90; CT: 0.85; HR-CT: 0.85). 10% MTF improved from 10.1 LP/cm for HR-CT to 21.7 LP/cm for SPCCT. Visual investigation of small pulmonary structures was superior for SPCCT in the animal study. In conclusion, the SPCCT prototype has the potential to improve the assessment of lung structures due to higher resolution compared to conventional CT.
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Details
; Ehn, Sebastian 4 ; Fingerle, Alexander A 1 ; Brendel, Bernhard 2 ; Pfeiffer, Franz 4 ; Roessl, Ewald 2 ; Rummeny, Ernst J 1 ; Pfeiffer, Daniela 1 ; Proksa, Roland 2 ; Douek, Philippe 3 ; Noël, Peter B 5
1 Department of diagnostic and interventional Radiology, Technische Universität München, Munich, Germany
2 Philips GmbH Innovative Technologies, Research Laboratories, Hamburg, Germany
3 Department of Interventional Radiology and Cardio-vascular and Thoracic Diagnostic Imaging, Louis Pradel University Hospital, Bron, France; CREATIS, CNRS UMR 5220, INSA-Lyon, France
4 Chair of Biomedical Physics, Department of Physics & Munich School of BioEngineering, Technische Universität München, Garching, Germany
5 Department of diagnostic and interventional Radiology, Technische Universität München, Munich, Germany; Department of Radiology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA




