• Improved noninvasive coronary angiography in morbidly obese patients with dual-source computed tomography

    Kavitha M. Chinnaiyan, MD, FACC, Peter A. McCuUough, MD, MPH, FACC, FACP, FAHA, FCCP, Thomas G. Flohr, PhD, James H. Wegner, BS, Gilbert L. Raff, MD, FACC

    BACKGROUND: Morbidly obese persons (body mass index [BMI; in kg/m ] > 40) have an in­creased risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality but have reduced accuracy with conventional cardiac testing and coronary CT angiography (CCTA).


    OBJECTIVE
    : This study investigated a novel dual-source computed tomography (DSCT) acquisition and reconstruction method for coronary imaging in morbidly obese patients.


    METHODS: This was a observational study in which each patient served as his or her own control. After a single DSCT acquisition using a novel method, standard quarter-scan image reconstructions at a temporal resolution of 83 milliseconds were compared with temporal resolution reconstructions at 105, 125, and 165 milliseconds. Images were evaluated for diagnostic adequacy score and for image noise, signal-to-noise ratio, and contrast-to-noise ratio. In each patient, the image reconstruction with the best visual diagnostic score was compared with the control image for quantitative measures.


    RESULTS: Fifty patients (32 female; mean ± SD age, 51 ± 10 y; mean BMI, 44.8 ± 5.6) were enrolled. Scans were of diagnostic quality in 47 (94%) patients using the "best reconstruction" com­pared with 38 (76%) patients using quarter-scan reconstruction. Significant improvements were ob­served in noise (42 ± 16 HU versus 56 ± 19 HU; P < 0.0001), contrast-to-noise ratio (8.4 ± 3.3 HU versus 7.0 ± 2.2 HU; P = 0.0038), and signal-to-noise ratio (7.6 ± 2.9 HU versus 6.5 ± 3.5 HU; P = 0.030).


    CONCLUSIONS: CCTA with DSCT using a modified scan protocol and adjustable temporal recon­structions provides diagnostic image quality in >90% of morbidly obese patients.