• Detection of Pancreatic Tumors, Image Quality, and Radiation Dose during the Pancreatic Parenchymal Phase: Effect of a Low-Tube-Voltage, High-Tube-Current CT Technique-Preliminary Results

    Radiology: Volume 256: Number 2-August 2010

    Detection of Pancreatic Tumors, Image Quality, and Radiation Dose during the Pancreatic Parenchymal Phase: Effect of a Low-Tube-Voltage, High-Tube-Current CT Technique-Preliminary Results

    Daniele Marin, MD Rendon C. Nelson, MD Huiman Barnhart, PhD Sebastian T. Schindera, MD Lisa M. Ho, MD Tracy A. Jaffe, MD Terry T. Yoshizumi, PhD Richard Youngblood, MA Ehsan Samei, PhD

    Purpose: To intraindividually compare a low-tube-voltage (80 kVp), high-tube-current (675 mA) computed tomographic (CT) technique with a high-tube-voltage (140 kVp) CT protocol for the detection of pancreatic tumors, image quality, and radiation dose during the pancreatic parenchymal phase.

    Materials and methods: This prospective, single-center, HIPAA-compliant study was approved by the institutional review board, and writ­ten informed consent was obtained. Twenty-seven patients (nine men, 18 women; mean age, 64 years) with 23 soli­tary pancreatic tumors underwent dual-energy CT. Two imaging protocols were used: 140 kVp and 385 mA (pro­tocol A) and 80 kVp and 675 mA (protocol B). For both protocols, the following variables were compared during the pancreatic parenchymal phase: contrast enhancement for the aorta, the pancreas, and the portal vein; pancreas-to-tumor contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR); noise; and effec­tive dose. Two blinded, independent readers qualitatively scored the two data sets for tumor detection and image quality. Random-effect analysis of variance tests were used to compare differences between the two protocols.

    Results: Compared with protocol A, protocol B yielded signifi­cantly higher contrast enhancement for the aorta (508.6 HU vs 221.5 HU, respectively), pancreas (151.2 HU vs 67.0 HU), and portal vein (189.7 HU vs 87.3 HU), along with a greater pancreas-to-tumor CNR (8.1 vs 5.9) (P < .001 for all comparisons). No statistically significant differ­ence in tumor detection was observed between the two protocols. Although standard deviation of image noise in­creased with protocol B (11.5 HU vs 18.6 HU), this proto­col significantly reduced the effective dose (from 18.5 to 5.1 mSv;P< .001).

    Conclusion: A low-tube-voltage, high-tube-current CT technique has the potential to improve the enhancement of the pancreas and peripancreatic vasculature, improve tumor conspicu-ity, and reduce patient radiation dose during the pancre­atic parenchymal phase.