Methods: Between September 2017 and August 2018, a total of 91 consecutive patients (34 males, 57 females; mean age: 65.9±15 years; range, 37 to 91 years) who were referred for computed tomography pulmonary angiography were randomly imaged with either a standard or dual-energy protocol. Standard protocol (n=49) was acquired with a 64-slice multidetector computed tomography scanner using 60 mL contrast media (18 g iodine). A third-generation dual-energy computed tomography scanner was utilized to acquire dual-energy computed tomography pulmonary angiography and simultaneous lung perfusion imaging (n=42), which required 40 mL contrast media (12 g iodine). Two radiologists reviewed images separately to determine interobserver variability. Attenuation and noise in three central and two segmental pulmonary arteries were measured; signal-to-noise ratio and contrast-to-noise ratio were calculated. A five-point scale was utilized to evaluate image quality and image noise qualitatively.
Results: The standard protocol required a significantly higher amount of iodine. Comparison of two groups employing quantitative measurements (attenuation value in five pulmonary arteries, mean attenuation value, mean background noise, signal-to-noise ratio, and contrast-to-noise ratio) and employing qualitative measurements (five-point scale scores of image quality and image noise) revealed no significant difference between dual-energy and standard groups (p>0.05). Qualitative and quantitative evaluations demonstrated low interobserver variability.
Conclusion: Dual-energy computed tomography pulmonary angiography protocol delivers image quality equal to standard protocol, while requiring less amount of iodinated contrast medium and providing simultaneous lung perfusion imaging to contribute the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism.