• Effect of Slab Thickness on the CT Detection of Pulmonary Nodules: Use of Sliding Thin-Slab Maximum Intensity Projection and Volume Rendering

    Nadine Kawel, BurkhardtSeifert, Marcus Luetolf, Thomas Boehm

    OBJECTIVE. The objective of this study was to evaluate the detection rates of pulmonary nodules on CT as a function of slab thickness using sliding thin-slab maximum intensity pro­jection (MIP) and volume rendering (VR).

    SUBJECTS AND METHODS. Eighty-eight oncology patients (33 women, 55 men; mean age, 59 years; age range, 18-81 years) who routinely underwent chest CT examinations were prospectively included. Two radiologists independently evaluated each CT examination for the presence of pulmonary nodules using MIP and VR, with each image reconstructed using three different slab thicknesses (5, 8, 11 mm). The standard of reference was the maxi­mum number of detected nodules, which were classified by localization and size, judged to be true-positives by a consensus panel. Interreader agreement was assessed by kappa value on a nodule-by-nodule basis. Sensitivities for both reconstruction techniques and for the three slab thicknesses were calculated using the proportion procedure for survey data with the patient as the primary sample unit and were compared using the Wilcoxons signed rank test with Bon-ferroni correction for both readers separately.

    RESULTS. One thousand fifty-eight true-positive nodules were detected. Interreader agreement was fair to moderate. Sensitivity for pulmonary nodules was superior for 8-mm MIP (reader 1, 84%; reader 2, 81%) and was significantly better than the sensitivities of all other tested techniques for both readers (p < 0.001 each) independent of nodule localization and size (except for one readers analysis of 8-mm MIP versus 11-mm MIP for nodules > 8 mm). A higher sensitivity was achieved using MIP than VR.

    CONCLUSION. MIP with a slab thickness of 8 mm is superior in the detection of pul­monary nodules to all other tested techniques.