Abstract

Aims

The consequences of high radiation dose for patient and staff demand constant improvements in X-ray dose reduction technology. This study assessed non-inferiority of image quality and quantified patient dose reduction in interventional cardiology for an anatomy-specific optimised cine acquisition chain combined with advanced real-time image noise reduction algorithms referred to as ‘study cine’, compared with conventional angiography.

Methods

Fifty patients underwent two coronary angiographic acquisitions: one with advanced image processing and optimised exposure system settings to enable dose reduction (study cine) and one with standard image processing and exposure settings (reference cine). The image sets of 39 patients (18 females, 21 males) were rated by six experienced independent reviewers, blinded to the patient and image characteristics. The image pairs were randomly presented. Overall 85 % of the study cine images were rated as better or equal quality compared with the reference cine (95 % CI 0.81–0.90). The median dose area product per frame decreased from 55 to 26 mGy.cm2/frame (53 % reduction, p < 0.001).

Conclusion

This study demonstrates that the novel X-ray imaging technology provides non-inferior image quality compared with conventional angiographic systems for interventional cardiology with a 53 % patient dose reduction.

Details

Title
Novel X-ray image noise reduction technology reduces patient radiation dose while maintaining image quality in coronary angiography
Author
ten Cate, T. 1 ; van Wely, M. 1 ; Gehlmann, H. 1 ; Mauti, M. 2 ; Camaro, C. 1 ; Reifart, N. 3 ; Suryapranata, H. 1 ; de Boer, M.J. 1 

 RadboudUMC, Department of Interventional Cardiology, Nijmegen, The Netherlands (GRID:grid.10417.33) (ISNI:0000000404449382) 
 Philips Healthcare, Best, The Netherlands (GRID:grid.417284.c) (ISNI:0000000403989387) 
 Main-Taunus-Privatklinik, Bad Soden, Germany (GRID:grid.10417.33) 
Pages
525-530
Publication year
2015
Publication date
Nov 2015
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
15685888
e-ISSN
18766250
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2788794363
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2015. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.