Application of Dual-Energy CT Non-Linear Fusion Technology in Improving CTA Image Quality of Renal Cancer ()
1. Introduction
With the wide application of dual-energy CT and the continuous innovation of technology, different post-processing and analysis algorithms have been continuously developed. The generation of virtual single-energy images by non-linear fusion technology is one of the important post-processing applications of dual-energy CT [1] . Due to the strong absorption ability of high atomic number substances, such as iodine contrast agent to low-energy X-ray photons, in low-energy single energy spectrum images, contrast agent enhanced blood vessels and lesions and other tissues can be used to optimize the display of lesions. In recent years, this new technique has been reported continuously in abdominal clinical applications [2] [3] [4] . It is believed that this technique can improve image contrast and blood vessel display quality, reduce noise and improve image quality as well as the detection rate of small lesions. Thus it is a promising technique. The purpose of this paper is to study the significance of dual-energy CT non-linear fusion technology in improving CTA image quality of renal cancer patients, and to achieve high-quality CTA image with low-concentration iodine contrast agent.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. General Data
CTA images of 100 patients with renal cancer confirmed by pathology were collected, including 65 males and 45 females, aged from 32 to 89 years, with an average age of 57.6 ± 15.87 years. Among them, 50 cases took iodine concentration of 350 mg/ml and the other 50 cases took 300 mg/ml. These cases were classified into control group and experimental group.
2.2. Scanning Modes
All patients underwent kidney CTA scanning with Siemens Dual-source CT. Among it, the control group underwent conventional CTA scanning with a reference tube voltage/tube current of 100 kV/ref 150 mas, a bulb rotation speed of 0.5s and a pitch of 1; collimation width: 192 × 0.6 mm; reconstruction thickness: 1 mm. The experimental group adopted dual-energy scanning, with bulb tube A and bulb tube B. The reference voltage/tube current of the two bulb tube were 100 kV/ref250 mAs and Sn150 kV/ref125 mAs, respectively. Ball tube rotation speed was 0.5 s; pitch was 1; collimation width: 2 × 192 × 0.6 mm; reconstruction thickness: 1 mm. Group A images and group B images generated automatically. The patient took the supine position with foot-first mode. The American MEDRAD Stellant CT special high-pressure syringe was used with a contrast agent dose of 1.5 ml/kg body weight and a bolus injection rate of 4 ml/s. Before bolus injection of contrast agent, 20 ml of normal saline was injected at the same speed to test the patency of blood vessels, and 20 ml of normal saline was injected after injection of contrast agent. Contrast agent bolus intelligent tracking technology was adopted. The tracking point was set at the abdominal descending aorta 2 mm below the diaphragm, with a ROI area of about 1 mm・m2 and a trigger threshold of 100 Hu. The trigger scan started 7 seconds after the enhancement of the region of interest reached the threshold. The scanning range was 20 mm below the diaphragm to the level of the anterior superior iliac spine.
2.3. Image Quality Evaluation
The images of experimental group A and B were fused nonlinearly to obtain Mono+ 55 keV single energy images. The images of control group, 100 kV images and Mono+ 55 keV images of the experimental group were compared and analyzed for three-dimensional reconstruction to obtain VRT and MIP images.
Subjective evaluation: two senior image diagnosticians used the double-blind method to evaluate the cross-sectional images, VRT and MIP images of the above three groups of images at the workstation using Syngo.via. Classification criteria for CT display of renal artery branches [5] : the main renal artery is an tier-one branch; the anterior and posterior branches of the renal artery are the tier-two branches; the segmental artery is the tier-three branch; the fine branches below the segment branches are tier-four to tier-five branches. In this study, the image quality score of renal artery was divided into four grades according to the above grades: display of tier-one branch was one point; display of tier-two branch was two points; display of tier-three branches was three points; display of tier-four to tier-five branches was 4 points. And 5-point evaluation was adopted for Tumor contour and Image quality: 1 point: the image quality is very poor and cannot be used for evaluation at all; 2 points: the image quality is poor, and can basically be used for evaluation; 3 points: the image quality is general and can be tolerated, but is affected by appropriate amount of noise, artifacts and image distortion; 4 points: the image quality is good. The noise, artifact and image distortion does not affect the clinical diagnosis; 5 points: the image quality is very good. There is low noise, good contrast, no artifact and no image distortion, which completely meets the clinical diagnostic requirements.
Objective evaluation: Syngo. VIA software was adopted. The circular region of interest (ROI) in the abdominal aorta, renal artery, subcutaneous fat and renal tumor tissues at the level of renal hilum respectively, and was selected to measure CT values. The CT values of the same part were measured repeatedly for 3 times to obtain the average value, and the ROI was placed in the center of the blood vessel with the diameter not exceeding 2/3 of the diameter of the blood vessel to be measured; standard deviation (SD) of fat CT value was set as image noise; tumor contrast noise ratio (CNR) was (tumor CT value - fat CT value)/SD; SNR was CT blood vessel/SD. Based on that, CNR and SNR of abdominal aorta and renal artery were calculated.
2.4. Statistical Analysis
SPSS 20 software was used for statistical processing. The measurement data of each group was expressed as mean standard deviation. The differences of SNR, CNR, SD and subjective scores of the images of the three scanning modes were compared by Kruskal-Wallis test, and P ≤ 0.05 indicated statistically significant difference. The consistency of the two image scores was analyzed by weighted Kappa. Kappa > 0.75 indicated excellent consistency; 0.40 ≤ kappa ≤ 0.75 indicated good consistency and kappa < 0.40 indicated poor consistency.
3. Results
100 kV original images of experimental group were compared with the objective image indexes of the control group. The results showed significant statistical difference (P < 0.05) (Table 1). There was no statistically significant difference in CT value, SNR, CNR, SD of the Mono+ 55 kev images of the experimental group and the control group images (P > 0.05) (Table 2). Similarly, there was statistical difference between the 100 kV original images of experimental group and the control group images in subjective score (P > 0.05); And there was no statistically significant difference between the Mono+ 55 kev images of the experimental group and the control group images in subjective score (P > 0.05) (Table 3).
Table 1. Comparison of CT Value, SNR and CNR between 100 kV Original Images of Experimental Group and Control Group Images and Analysis (
± s).
Table 2. Comparison of CT Value, SNR and CNR between Mono+ 55 keV Images of Experimental Group and Control Group Images and Analysis (
± s).
Table 3. Comparison and Analysis of Subjective Image Quality Score between 100 kV Original Images of Experimental Group and Control Group Images (
± s).
4. Discussions
Renal cancer, also known as renal cell cancer, is the most common malignant tumor of renal parenchyma, accounting for about 3.5% of the malignant tumors of the whole body [6] . The treatment of renal cancer is mainly surgical resection or laparoscopic radical nephrectomy [7] . Before operation, clarification of the existence and shape of renal artery variation, the relationship between tumor and blood vessel, the presence or absence of pathological changes in renal blood vessel is of great significance to the selection of operation methods and the reduction of complications [8] . CTA has been considered as a common method for preoperative evaluation of radical nephrectomy. In order to obtain high-quality blood vessel images, traditional CTA usually uses high-concentration iodine contrast agents, such as iodine concentration of 350 mg/ml, 370 mg/ml or more. Most of the iodine contrast agents are excreted through the kidney. A large amount of high-concentration iodine contrast agents will undoubtedly increase the burden on the kidney and bring about the risk of renal damage to renal cancer patients. The purpose of this paper is to study the effect of dual-energy CT non-linear fusion technology in improving CTA image quality of renal cancer patients, so as to achieve the purpose of obtaining high quality with low iodine concentration contrast agent.
The third-generation dual-source CT non-linear fusion technology can transform two-energy image into single energy at any energy level within 40 kev - 190 kev (virtual monoenergetic reconstructions Mono+) image. The lower the energy level is, the stronger the image contrast is. Thus, the contrast-enhanced blood vessels and lesions have a better contrast than the normal single-energy CT scan in the low-power single-spectrum image. In recent years, the application of this technology has been reported constantly. Through the study of a group of pancreatic tumor patients, Davide Bellini and other scholars found that when the energy value was less than 70 keV, Mono+ could overcome the significant noise of normal Mono images to improve image quality. The objective image quality evaluation showed that the best contrast-noise ratio could be obtained in the Mono+ 40 kev energy level. The subjective image quality evaluation considered that the optimal image quality could be obtained in Mono+ 55 kev energy level [9] . Similarly, the study of Claudia Frellese and other scholars on the image quality between pancreatic cancer lesions and normal pancreatic tissue also found that the optimal image quality was obtained in the Mono+ 55 kev energy value [4] . And the application of renal tumor CTA is relatively rare.
In this paper, the quality of CTA image of renal cancer patients taking low iodine concentration (300 mg/ml) contrast agent and high iodine concentration (350 mg/ml) contrast agent respectively was compared by retrospective study. It was found that the image quality of patients taking high iodine concentration contrast agent was better. There was statistically significant difference in CT value, SNR, CNR and other objective image quality evaluation indexes between the two groups. There was also statistically significant difference in subjective image quality score between the two groups. Images quality of patients taking low iodine concentration contrast agent was evaluated after the non-linear fusion to generate virtual single energy images (Mono+ 55 kev). There was no significant difference in CT value, SNR, CNR and other objective image quality evaluation indexes compared with those of the control group, and there was no significant difference in subjective image quality scores between the two groups of images (Figure 1).
To sum up, the dual-energy CT non-linear fusion technique can improve the CTA image quality of patients with renal cancer and increase the contrast between blood vessel and surrounding tissue, tumor and surrounding tissue, so that patients with low iodine concentration contrast agent can have CTA images with the same quality as that of patients with high iodine concentration. It is undoubtedly possible to reduce the risk of hepatic and renal impairment in patients with low iodine concentration contrast agent. Therefore, the dual-energy CT non-linear fusion technology is worthy of popularization.