Title of article :
Reproducibility of calcium scoring of the coronary arteries: comparison between different vendors and iterative reconstructions
Author/Authors :
Choi, Kyu Sung Graduate School of Medical Science and Engineering - Korea Advanced Institute for Science and Technology (KAIST), Daejeon, Republic of Korea , Lee, Whal Department of Radiology - Seoul National University Hospital, Republic of Korea , Jung, Joon Hyung Department of Neuropsychiatry - Seoul National University Hospital, Republic of Korea , Park, Eun-Ah Department of Radiology - Seoul National University Hospital, Republic of Korea
Abstract :
Background
The coronary artery calcium scoring (CCS) has been widely used for cardiac risk stratification for asymptomatic patients.
Purpose
To assess the reproducibility of CCS performed on four different computed tomography (CT) scanners, and compare the variability between two reconstruction algorithms, filtered back projection (FBP), and iterative reconstruction (IR).
Material and Methods
A CCS phantom was made from agar and contained 23 pieces of chicken bones. The phantom was repeatedly scanned using four different CT scanners: Toshiba; GE; Philips; and Siemens. Images were reconstructed using FBP and IR. Agatston and volume scores of total bone fragments were calculated and the overall differences between the instruments were evaluated using the Friedman test. Comparison of the Agatston and volume scores between the two reconstruction algorithms, for each instrument, was evaluated using the Wilcoxon signed rank test.
Results
The difference in the Agatston scores was significantly different between the four machines (P = 0.001). The Toshiba scanner yielded the highest score followed by Philips, GE, and Siemens scanners. There was no difference in the CCS evaluated using the two reconstruction algorithms, except in case of the Siemens scanner (P = 0.032).
Conclusion
CCS performed on different scanners varied significantly. In the Toshiba, Philips, and GE scanners, there was no significant difference in the CCS determined using either an IR or the FBP algorithm. In the Siemens scanner, applying the IR algorithm resulted in a slightly different scores, which might not be clinically significant.
Keywords :
Iterative reconstruction , coronary artery calcium score , reproducibility , interplatform , computed tomography , inter-vendor variability
Journal title :
Acta Radiologica Open