Purpose: To compare the depiction of pulmonary arteries in pulmonary arterial catheter-based contrast-enhanced cone-beam CT with peripheral intravenous contrast-enhanced multidetector CT in patients with suspected chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension.
Material and methods: In 20 patients (15 men and 5 women, 63.4 y ± 16.3), cone-beam CT using a catheter placed in the main pulmonary artery and 64-row multidetector CT using an appropriate venous access were performed. Contrast enhancement was measured in the main pulmonary artery, the right and left pulmonary arteries, and the left atrium. The amount of peripheral vessel conspicuity adjacent to the pleural surface (distance from vessel-to pleura) was measured. Two readers (R1, R2) independently evaluated the pulmonary arteries for image quality and pathologic findings in both modalities.
Results: Contrast density was higher in the main pulmonary artery and right and left pulmonary arteries (P < .002) and lower in the left atrium (P = .001) on cone-beam CT. The smallest distance between clearly delineated vessels and the pleura was significantly lower on cone-beam CT images (P < .0001). Interobserver agreement was good for cone-beam CT (κ = 0.79) and multidetector CT (κ = 0.78), whereas intermodality agreement was moderate (R1, κ = 0.60; R2, κ = 0.59). Both readers detected more weblike stenoses with cone-beam CT (76; 22%) compared with multidetector CT (25; 7%).
Conclusions: Cone-beam CT shows improved contrast between pulmonary arteries and the left atrium and allows a more detailed depiction of the pulmonary arteries.
Copyright © 2016 SIR. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.