Impact of patient centering in CT on organ dose and the effect of using a positioning compensation system: Evidence from OSLD measurements in postmortem subjects

2019 
The purpose of this study was to investigate the frequency and impact of vertical mis‐centering on organ doses in computed tomography (CT) exams and evaluate the effect of a commercially available positioning compensation system (PCS). Mis‐centering frequency and magnitude was retrospectively measured in 300 patients examined with chest‐abdomen‐pelvis CT. Organ doses were measured in three postmortem subjects scanned on a CT scanner at nine different vertical table positions (maximum shift ± 4 cm). Organ doses were measured with optically stimulated luminescent dosimeters inserted within organs. Regression analysis was performed to determine the correlation between organ doses and mis‐centering. Methods were repeated using a PCS that automatically detects the table offset to adjust tube current output accordingly. Clinical mis‐centering was >1 cm in 53% and 21% of patients in the vertical and lateral directions, respectively. The 1‐cm table shifts resulted in organ dose differences up to 8%, while 4‐cm shifts resulted in organ dose differences up to 35%. Organ doses increased linearly with superior table shifts for the lung, colon, uterus, ovaries, and skin (R 2 = 0.73–0.99, P < 0.005). When the PCS was utilized, organ doses decreased with superior table shifts and dose differences were lower (average 5%, maximum 18%) than scans performed without PCS (average 9%, maximum 35%) at all table shifts. Mis‐centering occurs frequently in the clinic and has a significant effect on patient dose. While accurate patient positioning remains important for maintaining optimal imaging conditions, a PCS has been shown to reduce the effects of patient mis‐centering.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    15
    References
    5
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []