Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is defined as a localized enlargement of the aortic cross-section where the diameter is greater than 3 cm or more than 50% larger than the diameter in a normal segment. The most important complication of AAA is rupture, which, if untreated, results in mortality rates of up to 90%. Conventional open surgical repair is associated with significant 30-day mortality. Endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR) is a significantly less invasive procedure; it is related to a lower early mortality rate and a lower number of perioperative complications. Although EVAR is a minimally invasive technique, lifelong follow-up imaging is necessary due to possible late complications including endoleak, recurrent aneurysm formation, graft infection, migration, kinking and thrombosis. The total rate of complications after EVAR is estimated at approximately 30%, and the rate of complications that require intervention is 2–3%. Early detection and progression analysis of such situations is crucial for proper intervention.
Objective of this study is: to analyze CT numbers in arteries and endoleaks in true non-contrast (TNC) and virtual non-contrast phases derived from arterial (VNCa) and delayed (VNCd) phases of dual-energy CT (DECT) in patients after endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR); to assess the impact of image noise on subjective image quality parameters and the degree of subtraction of calcifications; to calculate effective dose (ED) reduction following replacement of TNC with VNC. The study included 97 patients after EVAR procedure. An initial single-energy TNC acquisition was followed by two DECT acquisitions. CT numbers of TNC, VNCa, VNCd were analyzed statistically. VNCd images were assessed qualitatively. The mean densities in endoleaks were 46.19 HU in TNC, 51.24 HU in VNCa, 42.24 HU in VNCd. The differences between them were statistically significant (p < 0.05). The mean signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) measured in the aorta and endoleaks was highest in VNCa, lowest in TNC images. No correlation between image noise, the results of qualitative analysis of VNCd, and the degree of subtraction of calcifications was found. Omitting TNC led to mean 6.54 ± 1.63 (SD) mSv (23.28% of total examination) ED reduction. VNC images have a higher SNR compared to TNC images with significant differences in the CT numbers between the TNC and VNC reconstructions. Image noise has no impact on the subjective image quality and the degree of subtraction of calcifications in VNCd images. The findings show a high diagnostic value of VNC images and suggest that VNCd images are optimal in the assessment of endoleaks with possible substantial ED reduction.
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