Resumen
Objective: To compare the diagnostic performance and radiation dose of reduced vs. standard scan range CT in diagnosing appendicitis. Methods: We retrospectively evaluated 531 consecutive adults who underwent emergency contrast-enhanced CT for abdominal pain or suspected appendicitis between July 2018 and March 2019. One hundred eighty-one young adults (mean age, 26 ± 6 years) were imaged from L2 to the symphysis pubis (reduced protocol). A total of 350 older patients (mean age, 55 ± 17 years) and those with a wider differential diagnosis were imaged from the diaphragm to the ischium (standard protocol). The reference standard was histopathology (surgical cases) or 3 months of medical record follow-up (nonsurgical cases). Sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were calculated. Mean dose-length products (DLP) were compared (t-test). Using an anthropomorphic phantom, organ doses were measured on CT scanners with (scanner 1) and without (scanner 2) automatic voltage selection; effective radiation doses were calculated. Results: The frequency of appendicitis was 57/181 (31.5%) and 80/350 (22.9%) in the reduced and standard groups, respectively. Results of the reduced and standard protocols respectively were as follows (95% CI in parentheses): sensitivity, 98.2% (90.4–99.9%) and 100.0 (95.3–100.0%); specificity, 99.2% (95.6–100.0%) and 99.6% (97.9–100.0%); accuracy, 97.8% and 97.4%; mean DLPs, 363 ± 191mGy∙cm and 633 ± 591mGy∙cm (p < 0.0001). Phantom-based measurements of effective dose were 47% lower on scanner 1 (4.64 vs. 2.48 mSv) and 26% lower on scanner 2 (4.68 vs. 3.45 mSv) with the reduced protocol. Conclusion: For young adults with clinically suspected appendicitis, a reduced scan range CT protocol is as sensitive, specific, and accurate as a standard scan range CT and imparts significantly less radiation dose. Key Points: • A reduced scan range CT protocol in young adults with high suspicion of appendicitis demonstrates similar diagnostic performance as a full-range abdominopelvic CT in undifferentiated adult patients. • The reduced scan range CT protocol imparts significantly less radiation dose: 57% based on dose-length product data and 26-47% based on anthropomorphic phantom data.
Idioma original | English |
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Páginas (desde-hasta) | 7817-7826 |
Número de páginas | 10 |
Publicación | European Radiology |
Volumen | 31 |
N.º | 10 |
DOI | |
Estado | Published - oct. 2021 |
Nota bibliográfica
Funding Information:This study has received funding from the David Fraser Radiology Research Foundation, “Organ dose measurements and determination of effective dose for clinical CT protocols using an anthropomorphic phantom.”
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, European Society of Radiology.
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging
PubMed: MeSH publication types
- Journal Article