A comparison of digital radiography systems in terms of effective detective quantum efficiency.
Abstract
PURPOSE
The purpose of this study is to compare digital radiography systems using the metric effective detective quantum efficiency
(eDQE), which better reflects digital radiography imaging system performance under clinical operating conditions, in comparison
with conventional metrics such as modulation transfer function (MTF), normalized noise power spectra (NNPS), and detective
quantum efficiency (DQE).
METHODS
The eDQE was computed by the calculation of the MTF, the NNPS, the phantom attenuation and scatter, and estimation of x-ray
flux. The physical characterization of the systems was obtained with the standard beam conditions RQA5 and RQA9, using the
PA Chest phantom proposed by AAPM Report # 31 simulating the attenuation and scatter characteristics of the adult human thorax.
The MTF (eMTF) was measured by using an edge test placed at the frontal surface of the phantom, the NNPS (eNNPS) was calculated
from images of the phantom acquired at three different exposure levels covering the operating range of the system (E(0), which
is the exposure at which a system is normally operated, 1/3 E(0), and 3 E0), and scatter measurements were assessed by using
a beam-stop technique. The integral of DQE (IDQE) and eDQE (IeDQE) was calculated over the whole spatial frequency range.
RESULTS
The eMTF results demonstrate degradation due to magnification and the presence of scattered radiation. The eNNPS was influenced
by the grid presence, and in some systems, it contained structured noise. At typical clinical exposure levels, the magnitude
of eDQE(0) with respect to DQE(0) at RQA9 beam conditions was 13%, 17%, 16%, 36%, and 24%, respectively, for Carestream DRX-1,
Carestream DRX-1C, Carestream Direct View CR975, Philips Digital Diagnost VM, and GE Revolution XR/d. These results were confirmed
by the ratio of IeDQE and IDQE in the same conditions.
CONCLUSIONS
The authors confirm the robustness and reproducibility of the eDQE method. As expected, the DR systems performed better than
the CR systems due to their superior signal-to-noise transfer characteristics. The results of this study suggest the eDQE
method may provide an opportunity to more accurately assess the clinical performance of digital radiographic imaging systems
by accounting for factors such as the presence of scatter, use of an antiscatter grid, and magnification and focal spot blurring
effects, which are not reflected in conventional DQE measures.
Links
Authors
Bertolini M, Nitrosi A, Rivetti S, Lanconelli N, Pattacini P, Ginocchi V, Iori M
Institution
Department of Advanced Technology, Istituto di Ricovero e Cura a Carattere Scientifico, Reggio Emilia, Italy. marco.bertolini@asmn.re.it
Source
Medical physics 39:5 2012 May pg 2617-27MeSH
AdultCesium
Gadolinium
Hospitals
Humans
Iodides
Luminescent Measurements
Phantoms, Imaging
Radiographic Image Enhancement
Radiography, Thoracic
Scattering, Radiation
Pub Type(s)
Comparative StudyJournal Article
Language
eng
PubMed ID
22559632
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