Background: In gout, several types of dual-energy computed tomography (DECT) artifacts have been described (nail bed, skin, beam hardening, submillimeter and vascular artifacts), which can lead to overdiagnosis. The objective of this study was to determine the optimal DECT settings for post processing in order to reduce the frequency of some common artifacts in patients with suspected gout.Methods: Seventy-seven patients hospitalized for suspected gout (feet/ankles and/or knees) who received a DECT imaging were included (final diagnosis of 43 gout and 34 other rheumatic disorders). Different postprocessing settings were evaluated using Syngovia software: nine settings (R1 to R9) were evaluated with a
Background:Dual energy computed tomography (DECT) is highly accurate for the diagnosis of gout. However, many artifacts have been described (1,2) such as nail bed, skin, beam hardening, sub-millimeter and vascular artifacts). Their presence can lead to a risk of over-diagnosis (false positives).Objectives:Main objective of this case-control study was to determine the optimal DECT settings post-treatment parameters (ratio and attenuation coefficient (HU)) in order to reduce the frequency of lower limb artifacts in patients with suspected gout of the lower limbs.Methods:Seventy-seven patients hospitalized for suspected gout arthritis (feet/ankles and/or knees) who received a DECT imaging were consecutively included (final diagnosis of 43 gout and 34 other rheumatic disorders). Different post-treatment settings were evaluated from the Syngovia software: an R1 (standard) setting with a ratio at 1.36 and minimum attenuation at 150 HU; an R2 setting with a ratio at 1.28 and minimum attenuation at 170 HU and an R3 setting with a ratio at 1.28 and minimum attenuation at 120 HU. The frequency of each artifact according to the 3 settings was determined. Diagnostic accuracy of R1 and R2 settings has been calculated. Correlations between artefacts and patient’s clinical characteristics were obtained by performing a Spearman test.Results:The R2 setting (170 HU, ratio=1.28) significantly reduced the presence of knee and foot/ankle artifacts compared to the standard R1 setting (85% and 94% decrease in beam hardening and clumpy artifacts in the ankle and foot, respectively (p < 0.001); a decrease of 71%, 60% and 88% respectively of meniscal beam hardening, beam hardening and submillimeter artifacts in the knee (p < 0.001). The use of R3 setting lead to a significant increase of some artifacts (clumpy artifacts, skin artifacts, beam hardening and nail beds.). In addition, our results found a positive correlation between the presence of deposits of knee menisci beam hardening chondrocalcinosis. Body mass index was also positively correlated with the presence of knee beam hardening artifact. Compared to standard setting, the use of R2 settings decreased sensitivity (0.79 [95CI: 0.65;0.88] versus 0.90 [95CI: 0.78;0.96] and increased specificity (0.86 [95CI: 0.71;0.93) versus 0.63 [95CI: 0.47;0.77] (p<0.001).Conclusion:Applying a ratio of 1.28 and a minimum attenuation of 170 HU (R2 settings) in DECT post-processing eliminates the majority of the artifacts located on the lower limbs, particularly the clumpy artifact and the beam hardening artifact.References:[1]Neogi T, Jansen TLTA, Dalbeth N, Fransen J, Schumacher HR, Berendsen D, et al. 2015 Gout classification criteria: an American College of Rheumatology/European League Against Rheumatism collaborative initiative. Ann Rheum Dis. 2015;74:1789-98.[2]Mallinson PI, Coupal T, Reisinger C, Chou H, Munk PL, Nicolaou S, et al. Artifacts in dual-energy CT gout protocol: a review of 50 suspected cases with an artifact identification guide. AJR 2014;203:W103-109.Disclosure of Interests:None declared.
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