A comprehensive study on the relationship between image quality and imaging dose in low-dose cone beam CT
Hao Yan, Laura Cervino, Xun Jia, and Steve B. Jiang

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between image quality and dose in low-dose cone beam CT, identifying optimal protocols and dose thresholds for various imaging tasks using extensive experiments and simulations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the dose-image quality tradeoff in low-dose CBCT, establishing guidelines for optimal scan protocols and dose levels based on imaging task requirements.
Findings
Image quality remains stable over a wide dose range under CS reconstruction.
Dramatic degradation occurs below 40 mAs total dose.
Optimal protocols involve medium projections and mAs, around 90-120 projections at approximately 72.8 mAs.
Abstract
While compressed sensing (CS) based reconstructions have been developed for low-dose CBCT, a clear understanding on the relationship between the image quality and imaging dose at low dose levels is needed. In this paper, we qualitatively investigate this subject in a comprehensive manner with extensive experimental and simulation studies. The basic idea is to plot image quality and imaging dose together as functions of number of projections and mAs per projection over the whole clinically relevant range. A clear understanding on the tradeoff between image quality and dose can be achieved and optimal low-dose CBCT scan protocols can be developed for various imaging tasks in IGRT. Main findings of this work include: 1) Under the CS framework, image quality has little degradation over a large dose range, and the degradation becomes evident when the dose < 100 total mAs. A dose < 40 total…
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