• Detection of Renal Lesion Enhancement with Dual-Energy Multidetector CT

    Radiology:Volume 259: Number 1-April 2011

    Amy M. Neville, MD Rajan T. Gupta, MD Chad M. Miller, MD Elmar M. Merkle, MD Erik K. Paulson, MD Daniel T. Boll, MD


    Purpose:
    To determine whether dual-energy multidetector CT en¬ables detection of renal lesion enhancement by using cal¬culated nonenhanced images with spectral-based extrac¬tion in a non-body weight-restricted patient population.

    Materials and Methods: Between January 2008 and December 2009, 139 patients were enrolled in this prospective HIPAA-compliant, insti­tutional review board-approved study. Written informed consent was obtained from all patients. After single-energy nonenhanced 120-kVp CT images were acquired, contrast material-enhanced dual-energy multidetector CT images were acquired at 80 and 140 kVp. Calculated nonenhanced images were generated by using spectral-based iodine ex­traction. Lesion attenuation was measured on the ac­quired nonenhanced, calculated nonenhanced, and 140-kVp contrast-enhanced nephrographic images. Enhancement, defined as a 15-HU or greater increase in attenuation on the nephrographic images, was assessed by using the baseline attenuation on the acquired and calculated nonenhanced images. Acquired nonenhanced versus calculated nonen­hanced image attenuation, as well as enhancement values, were compared by using paired Student t tests and Bland-Altman plots.

    Results: Hypoattenuating (n = 66) and hyperattenuating (n = 28) cysts, angiomyolipomas (n = 18), and solid enhancing lesions (n = 27) were detected. Mean attenuation values for hypoattenuating cysts on the acquired and calculated nonenhanced CT images were 6.5 HU ±5.8 (standard deviation) and 8.1 HU ± 3.1 (P = .13), respectively, with corresponding enhancement values of 1.1 HU ± 5.2 and —0.5 HU ± 6.2 (P = .12), respectively. Mean values for hyperattenuating cysts were 29.4 HU ± 5.6 on acquired images and 31.7 HU ± 5.1 on calculated images (P = .39) (corresponding enhancement, 4.7 HU ± 3.3 and 2.3 HU ± 4.1, respectively; P = .09). Mean values for fat-containing enhancing lesions were —90.6 HU ± 24.7 on acquired im­ages and —85.9 HU ± 23.7 on calculated images (P = .57) (corresponding enhancement, 18.2 HU ± 10.1 and 13.6 HU ± 10.7, respectively; P = .19). Mean attenuation val­ues for solid enhancing lesions were 26.0 HU ± 15.0 on acquired images and 27.7 HU ± 14.9 on calculated images (P= .45) (corresponding enhancement, 60.3 HU ± 13.1 and 58.3 HU ± 15.5, respectively; P = .38).

    Conclusion:Dual-energy CT acquisitions with spectral-based post­processing enabled accurate detection of renal lesion en­hancement across the attenuation spectrum of frequently encountered renal lesions in a non-body habitus-restricted patient population.