Body Weight-Based Protocols During Whole Body FDG PET/CT Significantly Reduces Radiation Dose without Compromising Image Quality:Findings in a Large Cohort Study
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Elsevier USA
Abstract
Rationale and Objectives: To investigate radiation dose reduction during whole body fluorodeoxyglucose ( 18 F-FDG)positron emission tomographic (PET)/computed tomography (CT)by employing weight-based protocols. Materials and Methods: One thousand and twenty-eight patients were referred for 18 F-FDG PET/CT study with one of two protocols: conventional protocol I; 120 kVp, 120 mAs, 0.5 second rotation time, pitch 0.8 mm/rot across all body weights; four-tier body weight protocol II all used 140 kVp, 0.75 seconds rotation time and pitch 0.8 mm/rot: Protocol A (≤60 kg): 35 mAs, Protocol B (61–80 kg): 50 mAs, Protocol C (81–100 kg): 65 mAs, and Protocol D: (>101 kg): 100 mAs. All protocols employed tube current modulation. Quantitative and qualitative image visual grading characteristics assessed image quality. Results: Patient demographics demonstrated no significant difference between each protocol except for patient weight in weight protocol IIB (p < 0.009). Mean effective dose in all protocols were significantly lower in Protocol B compared to A (p < 0.009). Contrast-to-noise ratio demonstrated no differences between each protocol (p < 0.21)except for weight protocol in protocol IIA (<60 kg, p = 0.035)with the visual grading characteristics demonstrating preference over protocol II compared to I. Conclusion: Significant reduction in radiation dose can be achieved using patient-specific body weight-based protocols during whole-body 18 F-FDG PET/CT without compromising image quality when employing weight-based protocols. © 2018 The Association of University Radiologists
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Body weight, Clinical protocols, Cohort studies, Female, Fluorodeoxyglucose f18, Humans, Male, Middle aged, Positron emission tomography computed tomography, Radiation dosage, Radiation exposure, Radiopharmaceuticals, Retrospective studies, Signal-to-noise ratio, Fluorodeoxyglucose f 18, Radiopharmaceutical agent, Area under the curve, Article, Body mass, Body surface, Clinical protocol, Cohort analysis, Contrast to noise ratio, Demography, Dosimetry, Human, Image analysis, Image artifact, Image quality, Major clinical study, Obesity, Priority journal, Qualitative analysis, Quantitative analysis, Radiation dose, Radiation dose reduction, Retrospective study, Whole body ct, Whole body pet, Positron emission tomography-computed tomography, Prevention and control, Procedures, Signal noise ratio