1. Assessment of cervical spine CT by an image quality audit using qualitative and quantitative methods.
- Author
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Bajwa H, Sritharan T, Botha T, Jackson P, McAnulty K, Lim LJ, Tran PV, Reeves S, Biffin L, and Narayanan H
- Abstract
Introduction: To study the feasibility and assess the correlation of qualitative and quantitative methods for an image quality (IQ) audit of a Cervical spine CT., Methods: Five radiologists retrospectively performed a blinded visual grading analysis (VGA) on 20 studies (10 from Protocol 1 and 10 from Protocol 2), using the RANZCR CT IQ Self-Audit worksheet. A Visual Grading Analysis Score (VGAS) and Area under the curve using Visual Grading Characteristics (AUC
VGC ) were the figures of merit. Quantitative metrics for noise and contrast were correlated to the qualitative assessment., Results: No statistically significant difference was observed in the IQ, VGASProtocol 1 = 0.65, 95% CI [0.54, 0.75] and VGASProtocol 2 = 0.73, 95% CI [0.67, 0.79] and AUCVGC = 0.548, 95% CI [0.40, 0.69]. Protocol 2 indicated a statistically significant average dose reduction of 35% in CTDIvol (P = 0.020) and a higher noise; however, the difference was statistically insignificant. There was a moderate correlation between the manual noise measurements in soft tissue and air (P = 0.035) and a strong correlation between the manual and automated noise measurements (P < 0.001). The contrast resolution-based quantitative parameter, EdgeGradientSoft, correlated to the qualitative scores (P = 0.031)., Conclusion: Validated VGA tools can be used for IQ audits; however, tailoring the image criteria and rating scale to the clinical practice is suggested. The use of contrast-based IQ metrics showed encouraging results, and further larger-scale studies are needed to explore their potential use in quality management., (© 2024 Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Radiologists.)- Published
- 2024
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