Survey of CT radiation doses and iodinated contrast medium administration: an international multicentric study
- PMID: 39181948
- DOI: 10.1007/s00330-024-11017-7
Survey of CT radiation doses and iodinated contrast medium administration: an international multicentric study
Abstract
Objective: To assess the relationship between intravenous iodinated contrast media (ICM) administration usage and radiation doses for contrast-enhanced (CE) CT of head, chest, and abdomen-pelvis (AP) in international, multicenter settings.
Methods: Our international (n = 16 countries), multicenter (n = 43 sites), and cross-sectional (ConRad) study had two parts. Part 1: Redcap survey with questions on information related to CT and ICM manufacturer/brand and respective protocols. Part 2: Information on 3,258 patients (18-96 years; M:F 1654:1604) who underwent CECT for a routine head (n = 456), chest (n = 528), AP (n = 599), head CT angiography (n = 539), pulmonary embolism (n = 599), and liver CT examinations (n = 537) at 43 sites across five continents. The following information was recorded: hospital name, patient age, gender, body mass index [BMI], clinical indications, scan parameters (number of scan phases, kV), IV-contrast information (concentration, volume, flow rate, and delay), and dose indices (CTDIvol and DLP).
Results: Most routine chest (58.4%) and AP (68.7%) CECT exams were performed with 2-4 scan phases with fixed scan delay (chest 71.4%; AP 79.8%, liver CECT 50.7%) following ICM administration. Most sites did not change kV across different patients and scan phases; most CECT protocols were performed at 120-140 kV (83%, 1979/2685). There were no significant differences between radiation doses for non-contrast (CTDIvol 24 [16-30] mGy; DLP 633 [414-702] mGy·cm) and post-contrast phases (22 [19-27] mGy; 648 [392-694] mGy·cm) (p = 0.142). Sites that used bolus tracking for chest and AP CECT had lower CTDIvol than sites with fixed scan delays (p < 0.001). There was no correlation between BMI and CTDIvol (r2 ≤ - 0.1 to 0.1, p = 0.931).
Conclusion: Our study demonstrates up to ten-fold variability in ICM injection protocols and radiation doses across different CT protocols. The study emphasizes the need for optimizing CT scanning and contrast protocols to reduce unnecessary contrast and radiation exposure to patients.
Clinical relevance statement: The wide variability and lack of standardization of ICM media and radiation doses in CT protocols suggest the need for education and optimization of contrast usage and scan factors for optimizing image quality in CECT.
Key points: There is a lack of patient-centric CT protocol optimization taking into consideration mainly patients' size. There is a lack of correlation between ICM volume and CT radiation dose across CT protocol. A ten-fold variation in iodine-load for the same CT protocol in sites suggests a lack of standardization.
Keywords: Adult; Contrast; Radiation; X-ray computed tomography.
© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to European Society of Radiology.
Conflict of interest statement
Compliance with ethical standards. Guarantor: The scientific guarantor of this publication is Dr Mannudeep Kalra Conflict of interest: Two study coauthors (Mannudeep K. Kalra and Subba R. Digumarthy) have received unrelated research grants from Coreline Inc., Qure AI, Riverain Tech, Siemens Healthineers, and Vuno Inc. The remaining co-authors have no financial disclosures. All coauthors had independent access to the study data and the manuscript. Statistics and biometry: One of the authors has significant statistical expertise: Dr. Lina Karout. Informed consent: Written informed consent was waived by the Institutional Review Board. Ethical approval: Institutional Review Board approval was obtained. Study subjects or cohorts overlap: None. Methodology: Retrospective Cross-sectional study Observational Multicenter study
Comment in
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So many countries, so many customs, so many ways of using CT.Eur Radiol. 2025 Apr;35(4):1913-1914. doi: 10.1007/s00330-025-11356-z. Epub 2025 Jan 24. Eur Radiol. 2025. PMID: 39853338 No abstract available.
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