Virtual elastic sphere processing enables reproducible quantification of vessel stenosis at CT and MR angiography

F Gremse, C Grouls, M Palmowski, T Lammers… - Radiology, 2011 - pubs.rsna.org
F Gremse, C Grouls, M Palmowski, T Lammers, A de Vries, H Grüll, M Das, G Mühlenbruch…
Radiology, 2011pubs.rsna.org
Purpose To develop and evaluate a user-friendly tool to enable efficient, accurate, and
reproducible quantification of blood vessel stenosis in computed tomographic (CT) and
magnetic resonance (MR) angiographic data sets. Materials and Methods All clinical
experiments were approved by the institutional review board, and informed patient consent
was acquired. Animal experiments were approved by the governmental review committee
on animal care. A virtual elastic sphere passes through a blood vessel specified by user …
Purpose
To develop and evaluate a user-friendly tool to enable efficient, accurate, and reproducible quantification of blood vessel stenosis in computed tomographic (CT) and magnetic resonance (MR) angiographic data sets.
Materials and Methods
All clinical experiments were approved by the institutional review board, and informed patient consent was acquired. Animal experiments were approved by the governmental review committee on animal care. A virtual elastic sphere passes through a blood vessel specified by user-provided start and end points, and the adapting diameter over the course of the vessel is recorded. The program was tested in phantoms to determine the accuracy of diameter estimation, and it was applied in micro-CT data sets of mice with induced vessel stenosis. Dual-energy CT angiography and MR angiography were performed in 16 patients with carotid artery stenosis, and reproducibility and required reader time of this automated technique were compared with manual measurements. Additionally, the effect of dual-energy CT-based discrimination between iodine- and calcium-based enhancement was investigated. Differences between carotid artery diameters of mice and between automated and manual measurement durations were assessed with a paired t test. Reproducibility of stenosis scores was evaluated with the Fisher z test.
Results
Phantom diameters were determined with an average error of 0.094 mm. Diameters of normal and injured carotid arteries of mice were significantly different (P < .01). For patient data, automated interreader variability was significantly (P < .01) lower than manual intra- and interreader variability, while time efficiency was improved (P < .01).
Conclusion
The virtual elastic sphere tool is applicable to CT, dual-energy CT, and MR angiography, and it improves reproducibility and efficiency over that achieved with manual stenosis measurements.
© RSNA, 2011
Radiological Society of North America