Halving the radiation dose in cardiac
perfusion imaging is feasible with new image-processing software
A reduction by half in the radiation dose to which cardiac
patients are exposed during diagnostic perfusion imaging is now "feasible",
according to an Israeli study.
Results from the study were presented as a late-breaking trial at the International
Conference of Non-Invasive Cardiovascular Imaging (ICNC) in Amsterdam.
The various modalities of modern perfusion imaging - such as single photon
emission computed tomography (SPECT) - allow the non-invasive assessment of myocardial
blood flow and thus the detection of coronary artery disease. The cardiac imaging
test is usually performed twice to provide a comparison between at rest and at
exercise ("rest-stress", and vice-vera).
According to Professor Nili Zafrir, Director of Nuclear Cardiology at the Rabin
Medical Center in Petah Tikva, Israel, and first author of this late-breaking
study, the current application of standard myocardial perfusion diagnosis is "limited"
because of "high radiation dose" in the tracer substance with which
each patient is injected. She agrees that the radiation dose is within acceptable
limits, but insists that the level of radiation exposure (and its consequent cancer
risk) is still a matter of great debate. The present study was designed to test
whether radiation dose could be reduced without loss of resolution in the diagnostic
images.
Radiation effective dose is measured in millisieverts, and, with conventional
protocols, each investigation exposes the patient to a radiation dose of between
8 and 25 mSv. This study compared outcome from two protocols, a conventional full
dose injection of tracer substance and a half-dose injection. Each group comprised
109 patients, who were investigated with stress-only, rest-and-stress and stress-and
rest imaging. The full dose protocol was applied with dosages ranging between
12 and 32 milicurries (mCi) (depending on patient weight); in the half dose protocol
dosages ranged between 5 and 17 mSCi. These were converted to radiation effective
dose (in mSv).
Professor Zafrir explains that the study only became possible because of the
introduction of new image processing software, which was originally designed to
reduce the time it takes to acquire a full diagnostic image. " The aim of
our study," she says, "was to use the same software but to assess the
feasibility of reducing the tracer dose instead of reducing the acquisition time."
Results showed that 94% of the images from the half-dose protocol were assessed
as "excellent to good", suggesting no loss of image quality or diagnostic
accuracy when the radiation dose of the perfusion was halved.
Professor Zafrir also reports that 35% of the patients in the half-dose group
had only a single stress-only investigation, and they were exposed to a mean of
just 1.9 mSv. The total effective dose for stress-rest investigation was 7.19
mSv in the half dose protocol compared to 14.4 mSv in the conventional dose protocol.
"So it's our view that myocardial perfusion imaging is feasible with significant
radiation dose reduction," says Professor Zafrir. "We found that image
quality using the new processing software was similar to that in conventional
protocols. Indeed, the clinical results identified with the half-does protocol
were equivalent to those determined by full dose imaging. But significantly, the
half dose protocol reduced radiation exposure to a minimum of 1.9 mSv in one-third
of our patients, far below the dose range we see in conventional perfusion scanning."
"Clearly, we cannot be certain what the long-term benefit of reducing
radiation exposure might be, but theoretically it would seem important."
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