Dark-field chest X-ray imaging for the assessment of COVID-19-pneumonia

Author:

Frank ManuelaORCID,Gassert Florian T.ORCID,Urban Theresa,Willer Konstantin,Noichl Wolfgang,Schick Rafael,Schultheiss ManuelORCID,Viermetz ManuelORCID,Gleich Bernhard,De Marco Fabio,Herzen JuliaORCID,Koehler ThomasORCID,Engel Klaus Jürgen,Renger Bernhard,Gassert Felix G.,Sauter AndreasORCID,Fingerle Alexander A.,Haller BernhardORCID,Makowski Marcus R.ORCID,Pfeiffer Daniela,Pfeiffer FranzORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Currently, alternative medical imaging methods for the assessment of pulmonary involvement in patients infected with COVID-19 are sought that combine a higher sensitivity than conventional (attenuation-based) chest radiography with a lower radiation dose than CT imaging. Methods Sixty patients with COVID-19-associated lung changes in a CT scan and 40 subjects without pathologic lung changes visible in the CT scan were included (in total, 100, 59 male, mean age 58 ± 14 years). All patients gave written informed consent. We employed a clinical setup for grating-based dark-field chest radiography, obtaining both a dark-field and a conventional attenuation image in one image acquisition. Attenuation images alone, dark-field images alone, and both displayed simultaneously were assessed for the presence of COVID-19-associated lung changes on a scale from 1 to 6 (1 = surely not, 6 = surely) by four blinded radiologists. Statistical analysis was performed by evaluation of the area under the receiver–operator-characteristics curves (AUC) using Obuchowski’s method with a 0.05 level of significance. Results We show that dark-field imaging has a higher sensitivity for COVID-19-pneumonia than attenuation-based imaging and that the combination of both is superior to one imaging modality alone. Furthermore, a quantitative image analysis shows a significant reduction of dark-field signals for COVID-19-patients. Conclusions Dark-field imaging complements and improves conventional radiography for the visualisation and detection of COVID-19-pneumonia.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Cited by 7 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

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2. Vibration Correction for Slot-Scanning Dark-Field X-Ray Imaging;2023 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium, Medical Imaging Conference and International Symposium on Room-Temperature Semiconductor Detectors (NSS MIC RTSD);2023-11-04

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