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AJR 2005; 185:135-149
© American Roentgen Ray Society


Review

Helical CT for the Evaluation of Acute Pulmonary Embolism

Smita Patel and Ella A. Kazerooni

Department of Radiology, University of Michigan, 1500 E Medical Center Dr., TC2910D, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0326.

Received January 28, 2004; accepted after revision October 20, 2004.

 
Address correspondence to S. Patel.


Abstract
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Diagnostic Tests for Pulmonary...
CT Technique
CT Findings of Pulmonary...
Advantages of Helical CT
Pitfalls and Limitations of...
Accuracy of CT Pulmonary...
Interobserver Variability
Clinical Outcome After a...
Radiation Exposure from CT...
Cost Effectiveness
Evaluation for Deep Venous...
Indirect CT Venography
CT Venography Technique
CT Findings of Deep...
CT Venography Pitfalls
Conclusion
References
 
OBJECTIVE. In this article, we review the current role of CT pulmonary angiography and indirect CT venography for the evaluation of pulmonary thromboembolic disease.

CONCLUSION. With advances in MDCT technology, evaluation of pulmonary thromboembolic disease can now be performed with combined CT pulmonary angiography and CT venography as a "one-stop-shopping" test. CT pulmonary angiography is cost-effective, is accurate, has high interobserver agreement, and has an added advantage of detecting other life-threatening diseases in the chest that mimic pulmonary embolism.


Introduction
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Diagnostic Tests for Pulmonary...
CT Technique
CT Findings of Pulmonary...
Advantages of Helical CT
Pitfalls and Limitations of...
Accuracy of CT Pulmonary...
Interobserver Variability
Clinical Outcome After a...
Radiation Exposure from CT...
Cost Effectiveness
Evaluation for Deep Venous...
Indirect CT Venography
CT Venography Technique
CT Findings of Deep...
CT Venography Pitfalls
Conclusion
References
 
Pulmonary embolism is the third most common cause of cardiovascular death, after myocardial ischemia and stroke. In the early 1970s, the incidence of pulmonary embolism was reported as 630,000 per year with approximately 50,000-100,000 deaths annually in the United States and an untreated mortality of 30% [1]. In the past few decades, the incidence of pulmonary embolism has decreased by 45%, whereas that of deep venous thrombosis is unchanged [2]. Between 1979 and 1988, deaths from pulmonary embolism decreased by 30%. This change is likely due to a combination of factors including changes in diagnostic patterns, decreased incidence of pulmonary embolism, and decreased case fatality rate [3].

The diagnosis of pulmonary embolism continues to pose a challenge to both clinicians and radiologists because the signs and symptoms of pulmonary embolism are nonspecific. In the original Prospective Investigation of Pulmonary Embolism Detection (PIOPED) study [4], only one third of 755 patients who underwent pulmonary angiography for suspected pulmonary embolism had the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism confirmed. Older imaging tests, such as chest radiography, ventilation-perfusion (V/Q) scintigraphy, and pulmonary angiography, suffer from a lack of specificity or are invasive [5, 6]. CT pulmonary angiography is a relatively safe, noninvasive test that can be performed quickly in an emergency setting to directly identify the presence and extent of pulmonary embolism. CT has also been found cost-effective in various diagnostic algorithms [7-9].

Deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism are part of the spectrum of venous thromboembolic disease. Although deep venous thrombosis was diagnosed initially on conventional venography, it is now predominantly diagnosed noninvasively on sonography [10-14]. CT permits the diagnosis of both pulmonary embolism and deep venous thrombosis with a single test.


Diagnostic Tests for Pulmonary Embolism
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Diagnostic Tests for Pulmonary...
CT Technique
CT Findings of Pulmonary...
Advantages of Helical CT
Pitfalls and Limitations of...
Accuracy of CT Pulmonary...
Interobserver Variability
Clinical Outcome After a...
Radiation Exposure from CT...
Cost Effectiveness
Evaluation for Deep Venous...
Indirect CT Venography
CT Venography Technique
CT Findings of Deep...
CT Venography Pitfalls
Conclusion
References
 
Chest radiographs are predominantly used for excluding other causes of a patient's signs and symptoms and for the interpretation schema for V/Q scans [4, 15].

Ventilation-Perfusion Scintigraphy
For the past three decades, combined ventilation and perfusion scans have been the imaging technique of choice for the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism. A V/Q scan with normal findings essentially excludes pulmonary embolism, whereas a high-probability scan is highly specific for pulmonary embolism, allowing definitive treatment. However, up to 70% of V/Q scans are nondiagnostic, requiring additional tests to diagnose or exclude pulmonary embolism. In the PIOPED study [4], only 14% of patients studied had a normal V/Q scan and 13% had a high-probability V/Q scan; the majority, 73%, had an indeterminate or low-probability test result. Of the patients with pulmonary embolism, only 41% had a high-probability V/Q scan; the remaining 57% had either an intermediate or low-probability result [16].

Statistically significant greater accuracy for pulmonary embolism detection has been reported for CT pulmonary angiography (sensitivity, 94.1%; specificity, 93.6%; positive predictive value [PPV], 95.5%; negative predictive value [NPV], 96.2%) than for V/Q scans (sensitivity, 80.8%; specificity, 73.8%; PPV, 95.5%; NPV, 75.9%) by Blachere et al. [17]. Similar results were reported by Grenier and Beigelman [18]: sensitivities, specificities, and kappa values with helical CT and scintigraphy were 87%, 95%, and 0.85 and 65%, 94%, and 0.61, respectively. Many believe these results are sufficient justification for CT pulmonary angiography to replace V/Q scintigraphy in the diagnostic algorithm for suspected acute pulmonary embolism.

Catheter Pulmonary Angiography
Since the late 1960s, pulmonary angiography has been considered the most accurate test for the evaluation of pulmonary embolism and the reference test with which new diagnostic techniques are compared [19, 20]. Pulmonary angiography is invasive and underused and has a small—but definite—risk [21-23]. Two studies 12 years apart in 1,240 patients showed that only 12-14% of patients with an inconclusive diagnosis of pulmonary embolism on V/Q scintigraphy subsequently underwent pulmonary angiography [5, 6]. Many patients with suspected pulmonary embolism are treated with anticoagulants on the basis of clinical suspicion and nonspecific test results [5]. Recent advances in CT technology show that pulmonary angiography is an imperfect reference test: It is less accurate than previously thought, particularly at the subsegmental level [16].

Baile et al. [24] evaluated the accuracy of pulmonary angiography and CT pulmonary angiography in a porcine model using methacrylate beads injected into the pulmonary arteries via the jugular vein to simulate emboli. Both catheter pulmonary angiography and CT pulmonary angiography were performed; postmortem sections of the pulmonary arteries served as the reference test. The sensitivity and PPV for 1-mm-collimation helical CT were 87% (95% confidence interval [CI], 79-93%) and 81% (95% CI, 73-88%), respectively. For pulmonary angiography, the sensitivity was 87% (95% CI, 79-93%) and PPV was 88% (95% CI, 80-93%), which is not significantly different (p = 0.42) [24]. In an earlier study of angiography in a porcine model, researchers reported a 20% false-negative rate especially when there was a partially occluding thrombus [25]. Interobserver variability for pulmonary angiography is considerable, especially at the subsegmental level [4]. Overall interobserver variability can approach 10-15% with pulmonary angiography and is higher for smaller vessels [4, 16].

CT Pulmonary Angiography
Incidentally detected pulmonary embolism was initially reported on nonhelical CT studies performed for other clinical indications. In 1978, Sinner [26] first reported the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism on CT in a case report, and in 1982, Sinner [27] reported a series of 21 consecutive patients with pulmonary embolism seen on CT. Subsequently, visualization of pulmonary embolism on CT was reported in 1980 by Godwin et al. [28] in the central pulmonary arteries and in 1984 by Breatnach and Stanley [29] in the segmental pulmonary arteries. CT began to be used to evaluate the extent of pulmonary embolism in patients with known diagnosis of pulmonary embolism, but was not specifically used as a diagnostic test for pulmonary embolism until the advent of helical CT.

In 1992, Remy-Jardin et al. [30] reported the first prospective study comparing single-detector helical CT at 5-mm collimation with selective pulmonary angiography as the reference test in 42 patients with central pulmonary embolism. Their results—100% sensitivity and 96% specificity (one false-positive CT study due to asymmetry in pulmonary artery perfusion from increased pulmonary arterial resistance confirmed at pulmonary angiography)—showed promise for the use of CT. Teigen et al. [31, 32] reported similar results on electron beam CT for the detection of central pulmonary embolism. Subsequent studies comparing single-detector CT with pulmonary angiography showed a sensitivity of 53-100% and specificity of 78-100% (Table 1).


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TABLE 1 : Sensitivity and Specificity of CT Pulmonary Angiography for Acute Pulmonary Embolism

 

Although CT pulmonary angiography specificity has been consistently high, one of the major questions regarding CT pulmonary angiography is its sensitivity for subsegmental emboli. For example, in a study by Goodman et al. [33], a sensitivity of 86% was reported when evaluating the central arteries in 20 patients, but it dropped to 63% when subsegmental vessels were included. However, this was a small series. Patients with an indeterminate probability V/Q scan result were recruited and not consecutive patients with suspected pulmonary embolism. Eleven (55%) of the 20 patients had pulmonary embolism on angiography, much higher than the percentage of all patients evaluated for suspected pulmonary embolism.

In the past several years, CT technology has evolved from single-detector CT to MDCT and from 4-MDCT to 64-MDCT. This has significantly improved the visualization of small pulmonary arteries on CT pulmonary angiography studies and should translate into improved sensitivity for the detection of subsegmental pulmonary embolism in clinical practice. Gantry rotation speed has also decreased, from 1 to 0.4 sec, leading to a shorter breath-hold and less respiratory motion artifact. The method of CT pulmonary angiography interpretation has also evolved from hard-copy films to soft-copy computer workstation review using active scrolling. Improved sensitivity for the detection of small emboli over hard-copy review has been shown [34]. At many institutions, CT has replaced V/Q scanning for the evaluation of pulmonary embolism.

There is no accuracy data for MDCT available to date. The multicenter PIOPED II study, which completed recruitment of 1,068 patients in 2003, is designed to evaluate the accuracy of MDCT for pulmonary embolism detection, and should yield important information on the test characteristics of MDCT.


CT Technique
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Diagnostic Tests for Pulmonary...
CT Technique
CT Findings of Pulmonary...
Advantages of Helical CT
Pitfalls and Limitations of...
Accuracy of CT Pulmonary...
Interobserver Variability
Clinical Outcome After a...
Radiation Exposure from CT...
Cost Effectiveness
Evaluation for Deep Venous...
Indirect CT Venography
CT Venography Technique
CT Findings of Deep...
CT Venography Pitfalls
Conclusion
References
 
Patients should hyperventilate before the CT pulmonary angiography acquisition by taking several large breaths in and out to maximize breath-holding for the scan. CT pulmonary angiography is performed in a single breath-hold. The acquisition includes the entire lungs on the fastest scanners. The breath-hold ranges from 5 to 30 sec, depending on the scanner type, and is considerably shorter with 16-MDCT than single-detector CT. Other advantages of MDCT are increased z-axis coverage and decreased partial volume averaging.

The timing of contrast bolus administration is critical to obtain optimal opacification of the pulmonary arteries. A fixed scanning delay time of 20-25 sec can be used or a timing bolus can be used by injecting 15-20 mL of contrast material and placing a region of interest in the pulmonary trunk to obtain a time-density curve from which the scan delay can be calculated. Alternatively, bolus tracking with a cursor in the main pulmonary artery that triggers scanning at a preset threshold can be used. A timing method should be used in patients with suspected or known cardiac dysfunction because the optimum scan delay time can be 40 sec or more. Scanning is performed with a 100- to 125-mL bolus of IV contrast material injected at a rate of 4 mL/sec using a power injector. Table 2 details the CT techniques used on different generations of helical CT scanners.


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TABLE 2 : Evolution of CT Protocol with Increasing Detector Rows

 

Single-Detector CT Technique
Performing CT pulmonary angiography on a single-detector CT scanner requires a trade-off between collimation and coverage. Even with this, anatomic coverage is limited to approximately 10-12 cm, usually from aortic arch to dome of the higher hemidiaphragm. A CT pulmonary angiography scan at 3-mm collimation and pitch of 1.3-1.6 covers 12 cm in the z-axis using a gantry rotation speed of 1 sec (Table 2). Using narrower collimation or increasing z-axis coverage is not possible because of limitations on CT tube cooling. Imaging the remainder of the pulmonary arteries above and below the normal z-axis coverage requires either an additional time delay or wider collimation, resulting in suboptimal opacification of the arteries.

MDCT Technique
MDCT pulmonary angiograms are obtained at 1- to 1.5-mm collimation throughout the entire thorax. MDCT protocols for 4-, 8-, and 16-MDCT scanners used in the PIOPED II study are listed in Table 2. The scanning time ranges from 18 to 28 sec on 4-MDCT and from 8 to 13 sec on 16-row MDCT. This allows high-resolution imaging of small pulmonary arteries throughout the entire thorax in a shorter time and with less respiratory motion than single-detector CT.


CT Findings of Pulmonary Embolism
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Diagnostic Tests for Pulmonary...
CT Technique
CT Findings of Pulmonary...
Advantages of Helical CT
Pitfalls and Limitations of...
Accuracy of CT Pulmonary...
Interobserver Variability
Clinical Outcome After a...
Radiation Exposure from CT...
Cost Effectiveness
Evaluation for Deep Venous...
Indirect CT Venography
CT Venography Technique
CT Findings of Deep...
CT Venography Pitfalls
Conclusion
References
 
CT findings of acute pulmonary embolism are related to the identification of emboli that may or may not be surrounded by contrast material (Table 3 and Figs. 1A, and 1B). Secondary findings of pulmonary embolism may also be seen (Table 3 and Figs. 2 and 3).


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TABLE 3 : CT Findings of Acute Pulmonary Embolism

 


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Fig. 1A 42-year-old man who was hypoxic on room air; patient was paraplegic from spinal cord injury due to high-speed motorcycle crash. CT scan shows bilateral central pulmonary embolism (long thick arrows), subsegmental emboli (long thin arrow), and right lower lobe superior segment pulmonary infarct (short arrows). Note "tram-track" sign in inferior segmental artery of lingula (arrowheads).

 


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Fig. 1B 42-year-old man who was hypoxic on room air; patient was paraplegic from spinal cord injury due to high-speed motorcycle crash. CT scan shows rim sign in left lower lobe pulmonary artery (long arrow), small left effusion (arrowheads), and pulmonary infarct (short arrows).

 


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Fig. 2 67-year-old woman with glioblastoma multiforme and right-sided chest pain. Sagittal CT reformation image shows subsegmental pulmonary emboli (long arrows) and large wedge-shaped pulmonary infarct posteriorly (short arrows).

 


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Fig. 3 36-year-old woman with history of recurrent pulmonary embolism. CT scan obtained using lung window settings shows mosaic attenuation: areas of ground-glass attenuation with enlargement of pulmonary arteries and areas of low attenuation due to diminished blood flow from presence of emboli.

 


Advantages of Helical CT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Diagnostic Tests for Pulmonary...
CT Technique
CT Findings of Pulmonary...
Advantages of Helical CT
Pitfalls and Limitations of...
Accuracy of CT Pulmonary...
Interobserver Variability
Clinical Outcome After a...
Radiation Exposure from CT...
Cost Effectiveness
Evaluation for Deep Venous...
Indirect CT Venography
CT Venography Technique
CT Findings of Deep...
CT Venography Pitfalls
Conclusion
References
 
A considerable advantage of CT over both V/Q scintigraphy and pulmonary angiography is the ability to depict other conditions that clinically mimic pulmonary embolism, such as acute pneumonia, lung abscess (Figs. 4A, and 4B), pneumothorax, pneumo-mediastinum, pleural or pericardial effusion, aortic dissection, cardiovascular disease, mediastinitis, mediastinal abscess, esophageal rupture, and malignancy or interstitial pulmonary fibrosis; those other conditions have been reported in 11-70% of CT examinations performed for suspected acute pulmonary embolism [35-41]. With 16-MDCT and ECG-gating, it may also be possible to identify occlusion of a coronary artery or nonenhancement of the myocardium in patients with acute myocardial infarction [42]. This information may be important because clinical signs and symptoms of pulmonary embolism and myocardial infarction overlap.



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Fig. 4A 24-year-old man who presented with end-stage renal disease secondary to diabetes, right atrial mass, and 3-week history of pneumonia. CT scan shows large central pulmonary embolism (arrow) in right main pulmonary artery. Note pericardial effusion (arrowheads).

 


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Fig. 4B 24-year-old man who presented with end-stage renal disease secondary to diabetes, right atrial mass, and 3-week history of pneumonia. CT scan shows cavitary right lower lobe mass (long white arrow) representing lung abscess with adjacent empyema (short white arrows). Note incidental right atrial myxoma (black arrow) and small pericardial effusion (arrowheads).

 

Pitfalls and Limitations of CT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Diagnostic Tests for Pulmonary...
CT Technique
CT Findings of Pulmonary...
Advantages of Helical CT
Pitfalls and Limitations of...
Accuracy of CT Pulmonary...
Interobserver Variability
Clinical Outcome After a...
Radiation Exposure from CT...
Cost Effectiveness
Evaluation for Deep Venous...
Indirect CT Venography
CT Venography Technique
CT Findings of Deep...
CT Venography Pitfalls
Conclusion
References
 
As with any diagnostic test, there are pitfalls and limitations [43-45]. The pitfalls of CT pulmonary angiography can be divided into technical and interpretive pitfalls, as listed in Table 4.


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TABLE 4 : Interobserver Agreement of CT Pulmonary Angiography Versus Ventilation-Perfusion Scintigraphy

 

Technical Pitfalls
The most significant technical pitfall is poor contrast opacification of the pulmonary arteries (Fig. 5). This may occur with poor cardiac function and can be overcome using a timing bolus. Improper coordination of the total contrast injection dose and injection flow rate may lead to a pseudo filling defect in the pulmonary artery that mimics pulmonary embolism. Motion artifact can create a pseudo filling defect caused by doubling of vessels [46]. When a high-spatial-frequency reconstruction algorithm is used, high attenuation is seen around vessels, mimicking pulmonary embolism. A soft-tissue reconstruction algorithm should be used.



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Fig. 5 33-year-old man who had undergone pelvic surgery for trauma. CT scan shows poor bolus of contrast material in pulmonary arteries and beam-hardening artifact (arrow) from high amount of contrast material in superior vena cava, which accounts for low attenuation in right main pulmonary artery, making evaluation for subtle pulmonary embolism difficult.

 
In large patients, images obtained at thin collimation are grainy because of increased noise, which may obscure small arteries. Increasing the scanning collimation from 1.25- to 2.5-mm or reconstructing 1.25-mm acquired data at a 2.5-mm thickness may improve visibility in such cases.

When contrast material is dense in the superior vena cava, streak artifacts from beam hardening may obscure portions of the right main and upper lobe pulmonary arteries and may even mimic pulmonary embolism. Using a saline push of 20-25 mL immediately after the IV contrast injection may reduce the density of the contrast material, as does scanning in the caudal-to-cranial direction.

A pulmonary arterial flow artifact in which there is abrupt bilateral short-segment loss of pulmonary arterial opacification is thought to be caused by the inhomogeneous admixture of contrast material from the superior vena cava and unopacified blood from the inferior vena cava within the right atrium. This artifact is associated with inspiration immediately before imaging and is caused by transient interruption of the contrast column in the pulmonary arteries; this phenomenon has also been referred to as the "stripe sign" [47, 48].

CT pulmonary angiography can be a challenging technique to perform in ICU patients because of respiratory motion, suboptimal bolus with poor cardiac reserve, and streak artifact from lines and tubes. However, in one series of 50 consecutive ICU patients with suspected pulmonary embolism, 76% of CT pulmonary angiography examinations were of good to excellent quality [49]. A Swan-Ganz balloon catheter may cause streak artifact that creates the false appearance of emboli or may totally obscure an embolism (Fig. 6). To avoid this artifact, pull the catheter out of the pulmonary artery and place it in the heart or superior vena cava before CT pulmonary angiography.



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Fig. 6 76-year-old man with acute dyspnea and hypotension after sigmoid colectomy. CT scan shows Swan-Ganz catheter (black arrow) in right main pulmonary artery, with adjacent streak artifact. Note low-attenuation abnormality posterior to right main pulmonary artery (white arrow), which may represent pulmonary embolism or beam-hardening artifact from Swan-Ganz catheter. Moderate-sized bilateral pleural effusions with adjacent atelectasis are also seen.

 
Interpretative Pitfalls
Normal anatomic structures or abnormalities of other structures, such as the bronchi, can be mistaken for pulmonary embolism [44]. This interpretation error can largely be avoided using a computer workstation to scroll through the anatomy to confirm that what is seen is a pulmonary artery. To avoid confusing a pulmonary vein and pulmonary artery, actively scroll along the vessel to determine whether it drains into the left atrium, as a pulmonary vein would, or merges to form the hilum of the lung and the main pulmonary artery.

Intersegmental lymph nodes adjacent to pulmonary arteries can be confused for emboli (Fig. 7); however, this is less of a problem with thin-collimation acquisition on fast MDCT scanners. For example, in an early study of CT pulmonary angiography by Remy-Jardin et al. [30] in 1992, nine intersegmental lymph nodes were interpreted as pulmonary embolism in three of 41 patients. However, using thin collimation, overlapping reconstructions, active scrolling with soft-copy review, and multiplanar reconstructions, this pitfall can be avoided.



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Fig. 7 48-year-old man with acute onset of shortness of breath and pleuritic chest pain. CT scan shows low-attenuation abnormality posterior to both upper lobe segmental pulmonary arteries (arrows). This normal lymph node tissue may be confused for pulmonary embolism, particularly if hard-copy images are used for interpretation.

 
Mucous plugging in dilated bronchi appears as tubular branching low-attenuation structures that may mimic pulmonary embolism. A false-positive diagnosis of pulmonary embolism can be avoided by using active scrolling and following the bronchi proximally to the central tracheobronchial tree (Figs. 8A, and 8B).



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Fig. 8A 68-year-old man with metastatic prostate cancer, left-sided chest pain, and dyspnea. Axial CT scan shows multiple subsegmental filling defects that mimic subsegmental emboli in right lower lobe. However, these are mucoid-impacted subsegmental bronchi (arrows). Note small enhancing arteries adjacent to dilated mucous-filled bronchi.

 


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Fig. 8B 68-year-old man with metastatic prostate cancer, left-sided chest pain, and dyspnea. Sagittal reformatted CT scan shows large central right hilar tumor (long arrows) that is causing mucoid impaction of segmental and subsegmental lower lobe bronchi (short arrows). Low-attenuation branching mucoid impaction mimics pulmonary embolism.

 


Accuracy of CT Pulmonary Angiography
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Diagnostic Tests for Pulmonary...
CT Technique
CT Findings of Pulmonary...
Advantages of Helical CT
Pitfalls and Limitations of...
Accuracy of CT Pulmonary...
Interobserver Variability
Clinical Outcome After a...
Radiation Exposure from CT...
Cost Effectiveness
Evaluation for Deep Venous...
Indirect CT Venography
CT Venography Technique
CT Findings of Deep...
CT Venography Pitfalls
Conclusion
References
 
Most of the published data on the diagnostic test characteristics of CT pulmonary angiography have been collected on single-detector helical CT (Table 1), with sensitivity ranging from 53% to 100% and specificity ranging from 78% to 100% [30, 33, 35-38, 46, 50-59]. Pulmonary angiograms were used as the reference test in many of these studies. In several studies, there was selection bias because the study population did not consist of consecutive patients with clinically suspected pulmonary embolism, leading to wide variability in sensitivity and specificity.

There is still some reluctance to accept helical CT for the evaluation of pulmonary embolism, particularly when CT findings are negative. Other tests such as lower limb compression sonography or pulmonary angiography are considered the next investigation of choice. In a meta-analysis of 12 studies of CT pulmonary angiography using single-detector CT in 1,250 patients, Safriel and Zinn [60] reported overall sensitivity and specificity for CT pulmonary angiography as 74.1% and 89.5%, respectively. Those authors concluded that helical CT is an appropriate first-line test for patients with suspected pulmonary embolism.

An advantage of MDCT is thin-collimation scanning with better visualization of small pulmonary arteries, particularly at the segmental, subsegmental, and smaller levels [40, 61, 62]. Eighty-nine percent of segmental and 75% of subsegmental pulmonary arteries are well visualized with 1.25-mm-collimation 4-MDCT compared with 75% segmental and 36% subsegmental pulmonary arteries with 3-mm-collimation single-detector CT [40]. There is further incremental improvement using 16-MDCT. Ninety-four percent of segmental and 88% of subsegmental pulmonary arteries are well visualized using 16-MDCT (Patel et al., 2003 Society for Computed Body Tomography and Magnetic Resonance annual meeting). There is not only improved visualization of the subsegmental pulmonary arteries using 1-mm collimation, but also improved interobserver agreement about the presence or absence of emboli [40, 61].

Subsegmental emboli in patients with cardiopulmonary compromise may have greater prognostic implications than in patients without cardiopulmonary compromise. The presence of subsegmental emboli may be an indicator of a thrombus burden in the deep veins of the legs, representing future emboli. Using 3D reconstruction and 1-mm scan collimation, Coche et al. [63] visualized 96% of subsegmental pulmonary arteries in an ideal group of 20 patients with no lung parenchymal abnormality or artifacts, excellent contrast bolus, and z-axis coverage of the entire thorax including all subsegmental pulmonary arteries.

Improved visualization of the peripheral pulmonary arteries is also seen in patients with underlying pulmonary disease [62] (Fig. 9), predominantly because of the faster scanning times, thinner collimation, and the homogeneous pulmonary artery contrast enhancement capability of MDCT [40, 61, 62, 64]. Paddle wheel and multiplanar volume reformations allow continuous display of the pulmonary arteries and may be used as an adjunct when interpreting CT pulmonary angiography. This may lead to further incremental improvement in vascular conspicuity, particularly for vessels that run oblique to the imaging plane [65, 66]. CT plays a role in evaluating the evolution of pulmonary embolism, both for resolution of emboli over time and for chronic thromboembolic disease that may ensue.



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Fig. 9 53-year-old man with end-stage ischemic cardiomyopathy and bronchiolitis obliterans. CT scan shows extensive bilateral air-space disease. Despite severity of parenchymal disease, segmental pulmonary embolism (arrow) is shown in left lower lobe.

 

Interobserver Variability
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Diagnostic Tests for Pulmonary...
CT Technique
CT Findings of Pulmonary...
Advantages of Helical CT
Pitfalls and Limitations of...
Accuracy of CT Pulmonary...
Interobserver Variability
Clinical Outcome After a...
Radiation Exposure from CT...
Cost Effectiveness
Evaluation for Deep Venous...
Indirect CT Venography
CT Venography Technique
CT Findings of Deep...
CT Venography Pitfalls
Conclusion
References
 
CT
Interobserver agreement on a per-patient basis for the detection of acute pulmonary embolism at CT pulmonary angiography is moderately high, with kappa values ranging from 0.59 to 0.94 [17, 18, 38, 46, 53, 55, 57, 58, 67-72]. Chartrand-Lefebvre et al. [67] showed good overall interobserver ({kappa} = 0.85) and intraobserver ({kappa} = 0.87) agreement. Not surprisingly, interobserver agreement was better at the lobar level ({kappa} = 0.70) than at the segmental level ({kappa} = 0.47).

Global and vascular territory analyses using CT pulmonary angiography and comparing with pulmonary angiography yielded kappa values for the main, lobar, segmental, and subsegmental pulmonary arteries of 0.91, 0.78, 0.56, and 0.21, respectively, using 3-mm-collimation single-detector CT [72]. In a larger group of 299 patients using single-detector CT at 3-mm collimation, Perrier et al. [46] reported excellent interobserver agreement ({kappa} = 0.82-0.90) [45].

Thinner collimation improves interobserver agreement, with a kappa value of 0.98 using 2-mm collimation versus 0.94 with 3-mm collimation (p < 0.05) [38]. Significantly improved interobserver agreement is noted at the subsegmental level with 4-MDCT compared with single-detector CT [40, 61]. When reviewers disagree, it is usually because of suboptimal scan quality secondary to poor IV contrast bolus, extensive motion artifact, small subsegmental arteries, extensive pulmonary parenchymal disease, or partial volume averaging.

CT Versus V/Q Scintigraphy
There is considerable inter- and intraobserver variability (25-30%) in the interpretation of V/Q scans for pulmonary embolism, with poor interobserver ({kappa} ≤ 0.5) and intraobserver agreement [73]. Despite modifications of interpretation schemes, such as the Biello criteria, there has been no significant improvement in interobserver agreement [74]. Significantly better interobserver agreement has been reported with CT [17, 18, 36, 53, 55, 68, 75, 76] (Table 5).


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TABLE 5 : Pitfalls and Limitations of CT Pulmonary Angiography for Acute Pulmonary Embolism

 

CT Versus Pulmonary Angiography
Pulmonary angiography is less accurate than previously thought, particularly at the subsegmental level [24]. Interobserver agreement for the central arteries is 89% but is only 13-66% for subsegmental arteries [16, 77, 78]. Comparing dual-section CT with selective pulmonary angiography as a reference standard in 158 patients, Qanadli et al. [58] found that interobserver agreement was slightly better with CT ({kappa} = 0.78-0.94) than pulmonary angiography ({kappa} = 0.67-0.89); those authors concluded that helical CT could replace pulmonary angiography in most patients.


Clinical Outcome After a Negative CT Pulmonary Angiogram
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Abstract
Introduction
Diagnostic Tests for Pulmonary...
CT Technique
CT Findings of Pulmonary...
Advantages of Helical CT
Pitfalls and Limitations of...
Accuracy of CT Pulmonary...
Interobserver Variability
Clinical Outcome After a...
Radiation Exposure from CT...
Cost Effectiveness
Evaluation for Deep Venous...
Indirect CT Venography
CT Venography Technique
CT Findings of Deep...
CT Venography Pitfalls
Conclusion
References
 
When pulmonary embolism is diagnosed on the basis of CT pulmonary angiography findings, specificity is high. Therefore, a positive diagnosis of pulmonary embolism on CT is usually accepted. When CT pulmonary angiography is negative for pulmonary embolism, there may be greater hesitancy to withhold anticoagulation therapy and accept a negative CT pulmonary angiography result as a true-negative. This reluctance is because of lingering questions about the sensitivity of CT for the detection of subsegmental pulmonary embolism. However, many studies have reported that a negative CT pulmonary angiogram for pulmonary embolism is comparable to a negative catheter pulmonary angiogram in terms of patient outcome (Table 6).


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TABLE 6 : Clinical Outcome After a Negative CT Pulmonary Angiogram

 

After a negative catheter angiogram, fewer than 2% of patients develop pulmonary embolism. Two published series of 380 and 167 patients after a negative catheter pulmonary angiogram reported a 1.6% and 1.7% incidence of pulmonary embolism over the next 6-12 months [79, 80]. Similar results have been reported after a negative CT pulmonary angiogram, as listed in Table 6, for a total of 4,233 patients with a weighted average incidence of 1.3% for venous thrombotic disease and 0.4% for fatal pulmonary embolism [68, 81-94]. For example, in a study from the Mayo Clinic of 993 patients with negative CT pulmonary angiography findings, 0.5% of patients developed pulmonary embolism and 0.3% developed fatal pulmonary embolism after negative CT pulmonary angiography. Thus, in most patients with suspected acute pulmonary embolism and no symptoms of deep venous thrombosis, anticoagulation therapy can be safely withheld after negative CT pulmonary angiography.


Radiation Exposure from CT Pulmonary Angiography
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Diagnostic Tests for Pulmonary...
CT Technique
CT Findings of Pulmonary...
Advantages of Helical CT
Pitfalls and Limitations of...
Accuracy of CT Pulmonary...
Interobserver Variability
Clinical Outcome After a...
Radiation Exposure from CT...
Cost Effectiveness
Evaluation for Deep Venous...
Indirect CT Venography
CT Venography Technique
CT Findings of Deep...
CT Venography Pitfalls
Conclusion
References
 
Using an anthropomorphic phantom, Resten et al. [95] reported that average doses for single-detector CT pulmonary angiography were five times smaller than those for catheter digital subtraction pulmonary angiography [95]. Although radiation exposure is higher with MDCT, a potential benefit of MDCT compared with single-detector CT is improved visualization of the segmental and subsegmental pulmonary arteries and greater accuracy of pulmonary embolism detection [96].

In a recent study by Kuiper et al. [97], the average effective dose for 4-MDCT pulmonary angiography was 4.2 mSv compared with 7.1 mSv for digital subtraction angiography. In pregnant patients, the mean fetal dose with single-detector CT was recently reported as less than that for V/Q scanning at varying gestational ages: 100-370 mGy for V/Q scanning versus 3.3-20.2 mGy (first trimester), 7.9-76.7 mGy (second trimester), and 51.3-130.8 mGy (third trimester) for CT [98]. These doses are well below that considered safe for fetal exposure.


Cost Effectiveness
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Abstract
Introduction
Diagnostic Tests for Pulmonary...
CT Technique
CT Findings of Pulmonary...
Advantages of Helical CT
Pitfalls and Limitations of...
Accuracy of CT Pulmonary...
Interobserver Variability
Clinical Outcome After a...
Radiation Exposure from CT...
Cost Effectiveness
Evaluation for Deep Venous...
Indirect CT Venography
CT Venography Technique
CT Findings of Deep...
CT Venography Pitfalls
Conclusion
References
 
CT pulmonary angiography is less expensive than both catheter pulmonary angiography and V/Q scintigraphy. A study by van Erkel et al. [7] reported a cost-effectiveness decision model for the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism using six diagnostic strategies, four imaging techniques (V/Q, ultrasound venography, helical CT, pulmonary angiography), and the D-dimer blood test. This model included both the cost of diagnosing and treating pulmonary embolism and deep venous thrombosis, the accuracy and complications of the tests, and the prognosis in treated and untreated patients. Helical CT in any combination reduced mortality and improved cost-effectiveness in the diagnostic workup of suspected pulmonary embolism. Three years later, the same authors [8] reported that the most cost-effective strategy for evaluating thromboembolic disease was lower extremity sonography followed by CT pulmonary angiography if sonography was negative.

More recently, Perrier et al. [9] evaluated cost-effectiveness stratified by clinical probability for pulmonary embolism. Single-detector CT as a single test was not cost-effective. However, using 4-MDCT and assuming greater than 85% sensitivity for pulmonary embolism, CT was the most cost-effective strategy for all clinical probabilities when combined with lower extremity sonography and the D-dimer test.


Evaluation for Deep Venous Thrombosis
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Abstract
Introduction
Diagnostic Tests for Pulmonary...
CT Technique
CT Findings of Pulmonary...
Advantages of Helical CT
Pitfalls and Limitations of...
Accuracy of CT Pulmonary...
Interobserver Variability
Clinical Outcome After a...
Radiation Exposure from CT...
Cost Effectiveness
Evaluation for Deep Venous...
Indirect CT Venography
CT Venography Technique
CT Findings of Deep...
CT Venography Pitfalls
Conclusion
References
 
Large proximal deep venous thrombosis may lead to fatal pulmonary embolism and residual deep venous thrombosis in proximal lower limb veins may lead to recurrent pulmonary embolism and pulmonary hypertension [1, 99]. Until the mid to late 1980s, conventional venography was routinely used to diagnose deep venous thrombosis [100]. Currently, compression sonography, a widely available, noninvasive, and inexpensive test, is the imaging technique of choice [101-104]. The sensitivity and specificity of sonography for veins above and including the popliteal vein compared with conventional venography range from 92% to 100% and from 80% to 100%, respectively [105]. However, for calf veins, sensitivity drops to 11-92% [106].

Compression sonography is limited in the evaluation of pelvic and abdominal veins, obese patients, and those with complex venous anatomy. MR venography has excellent sensitivity and specificity, but is less readily available and is more expensive; it is usually reserved for patients with poor renal function or iodinated contrast allergy in whom sonography is technically difficult [107-109].

Incidental deep venous thrombosis has been noted on conventional CT examinations for years [110]. Direct CT venography has shown high sensitivity, specificity, and interobserver agreement, but is invasive [111, 112]. Indirect helical CT venography can be combined with CT pulmonary angiography for the noninvasive evaluation of both pulmonary embolism and deep venous thrombosis [86, 113].


Indirect CT Venography
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Abstract
Introduction
Diagnostic Tests for Pulmonary...
CT Technique
CT Findings of Pulmonary...
Advantages of Helical CT
Pitfalls and Limitations of...
Accuracy of CT Pulmonary...
Interobserver Variability
Clinical Outcome After a...
Radiation Exposure from CT...
Cost Effectiveness
Evaluation for Deep Venous...
Indirect CT Venography
CT Venography Technique
CT Findings of Deep...
CT Venography Pitfalls
Conclusion
References
 
Combined CT pulmonary angiography and CT venography was first described by Loud et al. in 1998 [113]. The same authors [86] subsequently compared CT venography with lower extremity venous sonography as a reference standard in 71 patients, 19 of whom had deep venous thrombosis revealed on both CT venography and sonography; the sensitivity and specificity for femoropopliteal deep venous thrombosis was 100%.

At least a dozen studies have been published comparing CT venography with sonography as the reference (Table 7). Sensitivity ranges from 71% to 100%; specificity, 94-100%; PPV, 67-100%; and NPV, 97-100% [81-88, 90, 91]. When CT venography is compared with sonography or conventional venography (Table 8), the weighted average sensitivity is 94.5% and specificity is 98.2%. Moderately good interobserver agreement, with kappa values of 0.59-0.88, has been reported [70, 84, 87].


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TABLE 7 : Sensitivity of Indirect CT Venography

 

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TABLE 8 : Indirect CT Venography for Deep Venous Thrombosis: Interobserver Agreement

 

In a large study of CT pulmonary angiography with CT venography, 58 of 650 patients had both pulmonary embolism and deep venous thrombosis, and 31 patients had isolated deep venous thrombosis [90]. In a large multicenter study using CT pulmonary angiography and CT venography in 541 patients, deep venous thrombosis was present in 8% of patients. Deep venous thrombosis was correctly identified on CT venography, but was missed on sonography in four patients; there were no false-negative CT venograms [82]. Another advantage of CT venography is evaluating pelvic and abdominal veins. Kappa values for interobserver agreement of deep venous thrombosis on CT venography are 0.56-0.88 [81, 82, 87] (Table 8). Alternative diagnoses or other findings clinically mimicking deep venous thrombosis may be seen [85].


CT Venography Technique
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Diagnostic Tests for Pulmonary...
CT Technique
CT Findings of Pulmonary...
Advantages of Helical CT
Pitfalls and Limitations of...
Accuracy of CT Pulmonary...
Interobserver Variability
Clinical Outcome After a...
Radiation Exposure from CT...
Cost Effectiveness
Evaluation for Deep Venous...
Indirect CT Venography
CT Venography Technique
CT Findings of Deep...
CT Venography Pitfalls
Conclusion
References
 
CT venography is performed after CT pulmonary angiography with the patient supine. After a scan delay of 2.5-4 min after the start of the injection bolus for CT pulmonary angiography, scans are obtained from the iliac crests to the tibial plateaus or from the diaphragm to the proximal calves in either the caudal-to-cranial direction or the cranial-to-caudal direction. Axial or helical scanning technique is used at 5- to 10-mm collimation. Some authors acquire slices every 20-50 cm when the axial technique is used. We use helical technique with a 7.5-mm collimation, a pitch of 1.375:1, and table speed of 27.5 mm/sec and scan from the tibial plateaus to the iliac crests (Table 2). Radiation dose increases significantly when thinner sections are obtained at shorter intervals. The study is interpreted on the workstation using the same technique as that used to interpret CT pulmonary angiography, but with a narrow window width.

The additional radiation dose imparted to the patient by addition of CT venography to CT pulmonary angiography is less of a concern for older patients. The radiation dose must be weighed against the benefit of a single test to evaluate for venous thromboembolism. The radiation dose is reduced by using sequential technique with images acquired at intervals of a few centimeters; however, a short-segment deep venous thrombosis could be overlooked with this technique. Low-dose techniques have been tried, but images can be noisy especially through the pelvis and in obese patients. The use of elastic stockings has been shown to significantly increase venous enhancement of the deep veins of the lower extremities during CT venography [114]