Physiological iodine uptake of the spine’s bone marrow in dual-energy computed tomography – using artificial intelligence to define reference values based on 678 CT examinations of 189 individuals

Author:

Fervers Philipp,Fervers Florian,Rinneburger Miriam,Weisthoff Mathilda,Kottlors Jonathan,Reimer Robert,Zopfs David,Celik Erkan,Maintz David,Große-Hokamp Nils,Persigehl Thorsten

Abstract

PurposeThe bone marrow’s iodine uptake in dual-energy CT (DECT) is elevated in malignant disease. We aimed to investigate the physiological range of bone marrow iodine uptake after intravenous contrast application, and examine its dependence on vBMD, iodine blood pool, patient age, and sex.MethodRetrospective analysis of oncological patients without evidence of metastatic disease. DECT examinations were performed on a spectral detector CT scanner in portal venous contrast phase. The thoracic and lumbar spine were segmented by a pre-trained neural network, obtaining volumetric iodine concentration data [mg/ml]. vBMD was assessed using a phantomless, CE-certified software [mg/cm3]. The iodine blood pool was estimated by ROI-based measurements in the great abdominal vessels. A multivariate regression model was fit with the dependent variable “median bone marrow iodine uptake”. Standardized regression coefficients (β) were calculated to assess the impact of each covariate.Results678 consecutive DECT exams of 189 individuals (93 female, age 61.4 ± 16.0 years) were evaluated. AI-based segmentation provided volumetric data of 97.9% of the included vertebrae (n=11,286). The 95th percentile of bone marrow iodine uptake, as a surrogate for the upper margin of the physiological distribution, ranged between 4.7-6.4 mg/ml. vBMD (p <0.001, mean β=0.50) and portal vein iodine blood pool (p <0.001, mean β=0.43) mediated the strongest impact. Based thereon, adjusted reference values were calculated.ConclusionThe bone marrow iodine uptake demonstrates a distinct profile depending on vBMD, iodine blood pool, patient age, and sex. This study is the first to provide the adjusted reference values.

Funder

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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