11 results on '"Jean-Baptiste Faivre"'
Search Results
2. Dual-energy CT lung perfusion characteristics in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and pulmonary veno-occlusive disease and/or pulmonary capillary hemangiomatosis (PVOD/PCH): preliminary experience in 63 patients
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Briac, Lefebvre, Maeva, Kyheng, Jessica, Giordano, Nicolas, Lamblin, Pascal, de Groote, Marie, Fertin, Marie, Delobelle, Thierry, Perez, Jean-Baptiste, Faivre, Jacques, Remy, Alain, Duhamel, and Martine, Remy-Jardin
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Perfusion ,Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension ,Hypertension, Pulmonary ,Humans ,Pulmonary Veno-Occlusive Disease ,Familial Primary Pulmonary Hypertension ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Hemangioma, Capillary ,General Medicine ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Lung - Abstract
In the stratification of potential causes of PH, current guidelines recommend performing V/Q lung scintigraphy to screen for CTEPH. The recognition of CTEPH is based on the identification of lung segments or sub-segments without perfusion but preserved ventilation. The presence of mismatched perfusion defects has also been described in a small proportion of idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and pulmonary veno-occlusive disease and/or pulmonary capillary hemangiomatosis (PVOD/PCH). Dual-energy CT lung perfusion changes have not been specifically investigated in these two entities.To compare dual-energy CT (DECT) perfusion characteristics in PAH and PVOD/PCH, with specific interest in PE-type perfusion defects.Sixty-three patients with idiopathic or heritable PAH (group A; n = 51) and PVOD/PCH (group B; n = 12) were investigated with DECT angiography with reconstruction of morphologic and perfusion images.The number of patients with abnormal perfusion did not differ between group A (35/51; 68.6%) and group B (6/12; 50%) (p = 0.31) nor did the mean number of segments with abnormal perfusion per patient (group A: 17.9 ± 4.9; group B: 18.3 ± 4.1; p = 0.91). The most frequent finding was the presence of patchy defects in group A (15/35; 42.9%) and a variable association of perfusion abnormalities in group B (4/6; 66.7%). The median percentage of segments with PE-type defects per patient was significantly higher in group B than in group A (p = 0.041). Two types of PE-type defects were depicted in 8 patients (group A: 5/51; 9.8%; group B: 3/12; 25%), superimposed on PH-related lung abnormalities (7/8) or normal lung (1/8). The iodine concentration was significantly lower in patients with abnormal perfusion (p0.001) but did not differ between groups.Perfusion abnormalities did not differ between the two groups at the exception of a higher median percentage of segments with PE-type defects in patients with PVOD/PCH.• Patchy perfusion defect was the most frequent pattern in PAH. • A variable association of perfusion abnormalities was seen in PVOD/PCH. • Lobular and PE-type perfusion defects larger than a sub-segment were depicted in both PAH and PVOD/PCH patients.
- Published
- 2022
3. Publisher Correction: The Technome - A Predictive Internal Calibration Approach for Quantitative Imaging Biomarker Research
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Michael Wels, Volker Heinemann, Dominik Nörenberg, Julian Walter Holch, Martine Remy-Jardin, Oliver Taubmann, Michael Sühling, Alexander Mühlberg, Stefan Maurus, Felix Lades, Rainer Kärgel, Alexander Katzmann, Jean-Baptiste Faivre, and Thomas Huber
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Male ,Quantitative imaging ,Calibration (statistics) ,lcsh:Medicine ,Computational biology ,Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Humans ,Medicine ,lcsh:Science ,Aged ,Emphysema ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Middle Aged ,Publisher Correction ,Survival Rate ,Calibration ,Biomarker (medicine) ,lcsh:Q ,Female ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
The goal of radiomics is to convert medical images into a minable data space by extraction of quantitative imaging features for clinically relevant analyses, e.g. survival time prediction of a patient. One problem of radiomics from computed tomography is the impact of technical variation such as reconstruction kernel variation within a study. Additionally, what is often neglected is the impact of inter-patient technical variation, resulting from patient characteristics, even when scan and reconstruction parameters are constant. In our approach, measurements within 3D regions-of-interests (ROI) are calibrated by further ROIs such as air, adipose tissue, liver, etc. that are used as control regions (CR). Our goal is to derive general rules for an automated internal calibration that enhance prediction, based on the analysed features and a set of CRs. We define qualification criteria motivated by status-quo radiomics stability analysis techniques to only collect information from the CRs which is relevant given a respective task. These criteria are used in an optimisation to automatically derive a suitable internal calibration for prediction tasks based on the CRs. Our calibration enhanced the performance for centrilobular emphysema prediction in a COPD study and prediction of patients' one-year-survival in an oncological study.
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- 2020
4. Impact of CT perfusion imaging on the assessment of peripheral chronic pulmonary thromboembolism: clinical experience in 62 patients
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Alain Duhamel, Julien Le Faivre, Jean-Baptiste Faivre, Jacques Remy, Suonita Khung, Nicolas Lamblin, and Martine Remy-Jardin
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Perfusion scanning ,Pulmonary Artery ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medical imaging ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Lung ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Neuroradiology ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Interventional radiology ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Pulmonary hypertension ,Peripheral ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Chronic Disease ,Female ,Radiology ,Pulmonary Embolism ,business ,Perfusion - Abstract
To evaluate the impact of CT perfusion imaging on the detection of peripheral chronic pulmonary embolisms (CPE). 62 patients underwent a dual-energy chest CT angiographic examination with (a) reconstruction of diagnostic and perfusion images; (b) enabling depiction of vascular features of peripheral CPE on diagnostic images and perfusion defects (20 segments/patient; total: 1240 segments examined). The interpretation of diagnostic images was of two types: (a) standard (i.e., based on cross-sectional images alone) or (b) detailed (i.e., based on cross-sectional images and MIPs). The segment-based analysis showed (a) 1179 segments analyzable on both imaging modalities and 61 segments rated as nonanalyzable on perfusion images; (b) the percentage of diseased segments was increased by 7.2 % when perfusion imaging was compared to the detailed reading of diagnostic images, and by 26.6 % when compared to the standard reading of images. At a patient level, the extent of peripheral CPE was higher on perfusion imaging, with a greater impact when compared to the standard reading of diagnostic images (number of patients with a greater number of diseased segments: n = 45; 72.6 % of the study population). Perfusion imaging allows recognition of a greater extent of peripheral CPE compared to diagnostic imaging. • Dual-energy computed tomography generates standard diagnostic imaging and lung perfusion analysis. • Depiction of CPE on central arteries relies on standard diagnostic imaging. • Detection of peripheral CPE is improved by perfusion imaging.
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- 2016
5. Coronary calcium screening with dual-source CT: reliability of ungated, high-pitch chest CT in comparison with dedicated calcium-scoring CT
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J. Remy, Martine Remy-Jardin, Alain Duhamel, Jean-Baptiste Faivre, Francesco Molinari, Valérie Deken, and Antoine Hutt
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cardiac-Gated Imaging Techniques ,Coronary Artery Disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Radiation Dosage ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Coronary artery disease ,Electrocardiography ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Heart Rate ,Risk Factors ,Calcinosis ,medicine.artery ,Heart rate ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Aged ,Neuroradiology ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Coronary Vessels ,Right coronary artery ,Female ,Radiology ,Tomography ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Nuclear medicine - Abstract
To investigate the reliability of ungated, high-pitch dual-source CT for coronary artery calcium (CAC) screening. One hundred and eighty-five smokers underwent a dual-source CT examination with acquisition of two sets of images during the same session: (a) ungated, high-pitch and high-temporal resolution acquisition over the entire thorax (i.e., chest CT); (b) prospectively ECG-triggered acquisition over the cardiac cavities (i.e., cardiac CT). Sensitivity and specificity of chest CT for detecting positive CAC scores were 96.4 % and 100 %, respectively. There was excellent inter-technique agreement for determining the quantitative CAC score (ICC = 0.986). The mean difference between the two techniques was 11.27, representing 1.81 % of the average of the two techniques. The inter-technique agreement for categorizing patients into the four ranks of severity was excellent (weighted kappa = 0.95; 95 % CI 0.93–0.98). The inter-technique differences for quantitative CAC scores did not correlate with BMI (r = 0.05, p = 0.575) or heart rate (r = –0.06, p = 0.95); 87.2 % of them were explained by differences at the level of the right coronary artery (RCA: 0.8718; LAD: 0.1008; LCx: 0.0139; LM: 0.0136). Ungated, high-pitch dual-source CT is a reliable imaging mode for CAC screening in the conditions of routine chest CT examinations. • CAC is an independent risk factor for major cardiac events. • ECG-gated techniques are the reference standard for calcium scoring. • Great interest is directed toward calcium scoring on non-gated chest CT examinations. • Reliable calcium scoring can be obtained with dual-source CT in a high-pitch mode.
- Published
- 2015
6. Impact of iterative reconstruction on the diagnosis of acute pulmonary embolism (PE) on reduced-dose chest CT angiograms
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Martine Remy-Jardin, J. Remy, Alain Duhamel, Nunzia Tacelli, Julien Pagniez, Jean-Baptiste Faivre, Simon Henry, and François Pontana
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Image quality ,Context (language use) ,Iterative reconstruction ,Pulmonary Artery ,Radiation Dosage ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,medicine ,Image noise ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neuroradiology ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Pulmonary embolism ,Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,Female ,Radiology ,Tomography ,Pulmonary Embolism ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Algorithms - Abstract
To evaluate the impact of iterative reconstruction on the detectability of clots. Fifty-three patients were enrolled in a study comparing reduced-dose and full-dose images, available from the same dual-source data set. From each acquisition, three series of images were generated: (1) full-dose images (from both tubes), reconstructed with filtered back projection (FBP) (group 1; standard of reference), (2) reduced-dose images (from tube A only; 60 % dose reduction) reconstructed with FBP (group 2) and iterative reconstruction (SAFIRE) (group 3). In group 1 (mean DLP: 264.6 mGy.cm), (1) PE was diagnosed in 8 patients (15 %) with 82 clots in the central (n = 5), segmental (n = 39) and subsegmental (n = 38) arteries and (2) mean level of noise was 30.56 ± 5.07. In group 2 (mean DLP: 105.8 mGy.cm), a significant increase in noise (44.56 ± 6.24; p
- Published
- 2015
7. Estimated risk of radiation-induced cancer from paediatric chest CT: two-year cohort study
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Jean Baptiste Faivre, Jaques Remy, Martine Remy-Jardin, Tilo Niemann, T. Santangelo, Hans W. Roser, Lucie Colas, and Jens Bremerich
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Male ,Risk ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neoplasms, Radiation-Induced ,Adolescent ,Cohort Studies ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Cancer ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Attributable risk ,Cohort ,Female ,Radiography, Thoracic ,Radiology ,Radiation-induced cancer ,business ,Risk assessment ,Tomography, Spiral Computed ,Cohort study - Abstract
The increasing absolute number of paediatric CT scans raises concern about the safety and efficacy and the effects of consecutive diagnostic ionising radiation. To demonstrate a method to evaluate the lifetime attributable risk of cancer incidence/mortality due to a single low-dose helical chest CT in a two-year patient cohort. A two-year cohort of 522 paediatric helical chest CT scans acquired using a dedicated low-dose protocol were analysed retrospectively. Patient-specific estimations of radiation doses were modelled using three different mathematical phantoms. Per-organ attributable cancer risk was then estimated using epidemiological models. Additional comparison was provided for naturally occurring risks. Total lifetime attributable risk of cancer incidence remains low for all age and sex categories, being highest in female neonates (0.34%). Summation of all cancer sites analysed raised the relative lifetime attributable risk of organ cancer incidence up to 3.6% in female neonates and 2.1% in male neonates. Using dedicated scan protocols, total lifetime attributable risk of cancer incidence and mortality for chest CT is estimated low for paediatric chest CT, being highest for female neonates.
- Published
- 2014
8. Pediatric chest CT at 70 kVp: a feasibility study in 129 children
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Teresa Santangelo, Antoine Deschildre, Jacques Remy, Tilo Niemann, Alain Duhamel, Lucie Colas, Simon Henry, Jean-Baptiste Faivre, and Martine Remy-Jardin
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Image quality ,Radiography ,Population ,Chest ct ,Signal-To-Noise Ratio ,Radiation Dosage ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Radiation Protection ,Image noise ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Child ,education ,Neuroradiology ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Radiation dose ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Reproducibility of Results ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Feasibility Studies ,Female ,Radiography, Thoracic ,Radiology ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Nuclear medicine - Abstract
Before introducing 70-kVp settings in the low-kilovoltage strategies for pediatric examinations, it was mandatory to demonstrate, at similar dose levels, an equivalence of image quality at 70 kVp and 80 kVp. To assess image quality of chest CT examinations acquired at 70 kVp in comparison with standard scanning at 80 kVp. We prospectively evaluated 129 children with a 70-kVp scanning protocol (group 1). All scanning parameters were kept similar to those usually selected for pediatric standard 80-kVp protocols, except the milliamperage increased by a factor of 1.6 to maintain comparable radiation dose. Image quality of group 1 examinations was compared to that of a paired population scanned at 80 kVp (group 2). The noninferiority hypothesis was fixed at 10% of the mean level of image noise. There was no significant difference in the mean dose length product (DLP) and the volume computed tomography dose index (CTDIvol) between the groups (DLP: 20.5 ± 5.8 mGy.cm [group 1] vs. 19.7 ± 7.6 mGy.cm [group 2]; P = 0.06) (CTDIvol: 0.8 ± 0.1 mGy [group 1] vs. 0.8 ± 0.18 mGy [group 2]; P = 0.94). The mean of differences in image noise between group 1 and group 2 examinations was −1.38 (−2.59; −0.18), verifying the noninferiority hypothesis. Subjective image quality did not significantly differ between group 1 and group 2 examinations (P = 0.18). At equivalent radiation dose levels, 70-kVp protocols provide similar image quality to that achievable at 80 kVp.
- Published
- 2014
9. Automated lobar quantification of emphysema in patients with severe COPD
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Martine Remy-Jardin, Alain Duhamel, Nunzia Tacelli, Jean-Baptiste Faivre, Valérie Deken, Charles-Hugo Marquette, Jacques Remy, Anne-Marie Bakai, and Marie-Pierre Revel
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prototype software ,Intraclass correlation ,Statistics as Topic ,Severe copd ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Pattern Recognition, Automated ,Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,Artificial Intelligence ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,In patient ,Lung ,Aged ,Neuroradiology ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Significant difference ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,respiratory system ,Lobe ,Respiratory Function Tests ,Radiographic Image Enhancement ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,Female ,Radiology ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Algorithms ,Kappa - Abstract
Automated lobar quantification of emphysema has not yet been evaluated. Unenhanced 64-slice MDCT was performed in 47 patients evaluated before bronchoscopic lung-volume reduction. CT images reconstructed with a standard (B20) and high-frequency (B50) kernel were analyzed using a dedicated prototype software (MevisPULMO) allowing lobar quantification of emphysema extent. Lobar quantification was obtained following (a) a fully automatic delineation of the lobar limits by the software and (b) a semiautomatic delineation with manual correction of the lobar limits when necessary and was compared with the visual scoring of emphysema severity per lobe. No statistically significant difference existed between automated and semiautomated lobar quantification (p > 0.05 in the five lobes), with differences ranging from 0.4 to 3.9%. The agreement between the two methods (intraclass correlation coefficient, ICC) was excellent for left upper lobe (ICC = 0.94), left lower lobe (ICC = 0.98), and right lower lobe (ICC = 0.80). The agreement was good for right upper lobe (ICC = 0.68) and moderate for middle lobe (IC = 0.53). The Bland and Altman plots confirmed these results. A good agreement was observed between the software and visually assessed lobar predominance of emphysema (kappa 0.78; 95% CI 0.64–0.92). Automated and semiautomated lobar quantifications of emphysema are concordant and show good agreement with visual scoring.
- Published
- 2008
10. Screening for coronary artery disease in respiratory patients: comparison of single- and dual-source CT in patients with a heart rate above 70 bpm
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Nunzia Tacelli, Martine Remy-Jardin, Jacques Remy, Valérie Deken, Thomas Flohr, Alain Duhamel, V Pansini, and Jean-Baptiste Faivre
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Male ,Respiratory-Gated Imaging Techniques ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Asymptomatic ,Coronary artery disease ,Internal medicine ,Heart rate ,medicine ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Mass screening ,Aged ,Neuroradiology ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Interventional radiology ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Coronary arteries ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,cardiovascular system ,Cardiology ,Female ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,human activities ,Artery - Abstract
To evaluate the assessibility of coronary arteries in respiratory patients with high heart rates. This study was based on the comparative analysis of two paired populations of 54 patients with a heart rate >70 bpm evaluated with dual-source (group 1) and single-source (group 2) CT. The mean heart rate was 89.1 bpm in group 1 and 86.7 bpm in group 2 (P = 0.26). The mean number of assessable segments per patient was significantly higher in group 1 compared to group 2 (P ≤ 0.0001). The proportions of patients in whom proximal and mid-coronary segments were assessable (i.e., the anatomical level enabling screening for asymptomatic coronary artery disease) were 35.3% for heart rates
- Published
- 2008
11. Radiation dose levels in pediatric chest CT: experience in 499 children evaluated with dual-source single-energy CT
- Author
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Martine, Remy-Jardin, primary, Santangelo, Teresa, additional, Colas, Lucie, additional, Jean-Baptiste, Faivre, additional, Duhamel, Alain, additional, Deschildre, Antoine, additional, and Remy, Jacques, additional
- Published
- 2016
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