QA QC Digital Radiography PDF
QA QC Digital Radiography PDF
QA QC Digital Radiography PDF
• Regulatory Compliance
• Physician responsible for clinical service is – Title 12, Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 20, Standards for Protection
against Radiation
ultimately responsible – State regulations http://www.tdh.state.tx.us/radiation/
• Standards of Care
• Medical Physicist oversees the program – ACR Standard for Diagnostic Medical Physics Performance Monitoring of
Radiographic and Fluoroscopic Equipment
• QC Technologist makes day-to-day – ACR Radiography and Fluoroscopy Accreditation Program (now defunct)
– M. B. Williams, E. A. Krupinski, K. J. Strauss, W. K. Breeden III, M.
measurements, verify post-repair integrity S.Rzeszotarski, K. Applegate, M. Wyatt, S. Bjork, and J. A. Seibert, “Digital
radiography image quality: Acquisition,” J. Am. Coll. Radiol. 4, 371–388
2007.
• Service engineer carry out repairs, PM, – NCRP Report No. 99 “Quality Assurance for Diagnostic Imaging”
calibrations – Nationwide Evaluation of X-ray Exposure Trends (NEXT)
– Reference Values1
• Providing the highest quality medical care
• MANAGING RADIATION DOSE!!!
1Gray JE, Archer BR, Butler PF, Hobbs BB, Mettler FA, Pizzutiello RJ, Jr.,Schueler BA,
Strauss KJ, Suleiman OH, and Yaffe MJ.(2005) "Reference Values for Diagnostic
Radiology: Application and Impact " American Association of Physicists in Medicine Task
Group on Reference Values for Diagnostic X-Ray Examinations. Radiology; 235:354-358.
Many factors affect image quality and patient dose
Where can we find instructions for how to
Wolbarst. Physics of Radiology (1993) Table 19-1
perform QC tests?
Factor Contrast Resolution Noise Patient Dose
• To identify and resolve discrepancies • Verification that what was purchased was indeed
prior to clinical use delivered and installed.
• Purchasing agent, radiological technologist, or
• To become familiar with the controls biomedical engineer may not recognize missing
and operation of the equipment critical components.
• For Continuing Education on new
technology and products
Advances in Digital Radiography: Categorical
Course in Diagnostic Radiology Physics. Eds
Samei E and Flynn MJ. RSNA 2003. 252 pp.
What about functional tests? Clinical Acceptability is the trump card!
• May test all operator controls to determine if they function.
• May test the manufacturer’s claims of performance.
• Any Diagnostic Radiographic
• May test specific performance that was crucial to the selection of Imaging System must produce
this equipment. images of sufficient quality to
– May or may not be contract provisions support clinical diagnosis at
– Ex: Throughput reasonable radiation dose to the
• May test compliance/conformance with industry standards of patient.
practice. – Physician defines diagnostic quality
– Ex: DICOM, IHE – Regulatory bodies may define
• May test whether manufacturer’s installation instructions were reasonable dose, else comparison to
followed. standard of care
• May collect “engineering data” for later reference. • Humans must be able to safely
operate the equipment
2
Film/screen
1.5 100 PSL Fuji Autora nging Spe cification
1
10 10000
0.5
0 1 67%
0.01 0.1 1 10 100 S=200, G=1.0
1000
Sensitivity (S)
1023
EDR Signal
• Measure output
500
400
300
y = 115.08x - 9.1053
R2 = 0.998
• Complications
200
– Digital Look-up Tables (LUT)
100
0
– Auto-ranging
0.00 1.00 2.00 3.00
Ex posure (mR)
4.00 5.00 6.00
– Energy dependence of code values: Beam
hardening
2048
Linear (125kVp no filter)
0
Linear (80kVp no filter)
0.000 5.000 10.000 15.000 20.000
Detector Exposure (mR) Linear (125kVp LucAl
w/grid) AGFA Test Object 75 kVp +1.5 mm Cu, 47 µGy exit
“Linear” Display processing Look-up Table
Display processing curve for Chest
from ROI of each step of image of calibrated stepwedge (LUT) is actually log-linear
Canon (Linear)
Canon CXDI-22
2048
Pixel value
Pixel value
1024
1024
512 512
0 0
0.01 0.10 1.00 10.00 0.01 0.10 1.00 10.00
Ex posure (mR) Exposure (mR)
Contrast 12
1024
– Heel effect: if possible, rotate detector 180o
Brightness 16,
Contrast 10
512
– Backscatter: Pb backing or tabletop
0 – Fixed SID
0.01 0.10 1.00 10.00
Exposure (mR) Seibert JA, Boone JM, Lindfors KK. Flat-field correction
technique for digital detectors. Proc. SPIE 1998; 3336
3336: 348-354.
Lesson #4: Assessment of Detector requires access to “for processing” image
data as well as processed image data.
Uncorrected DR image is inherently Non-uniformities are corrected by
non-uniform “flat-fielding”
Lesson #5: Assessing the receptor may require access to uncorrected image.
(pretty ! )
Willis CE, Thompson SK and Shepard SJ. Artifacts and Misadventures in
Digital Radiography. Applied Radiology pp. 11-20, January 2004.
(pretty darn uniform) (pretty darn …hmm)
• Contrast
– slope of detector characteristic
• Contrast resolution
– Detector ability to distinguish features of similar
signal level
– Grayscale bit depth
• Contrast detectability
– Observer ability to distinguish features of similar
(darn!)
signal levels
Lesson #6. A grayscale histogram is also helpful in assessing the receptor.
Identical machine,
Same exposure conditions same exposure conditions
SwissRay
1536
Pixel value
1024
1st Floor
2nd floor
512
2d lpxy=1/d 2
Sharpness
2
d
lpx=1/2d
• Spatial resolution lpx 1/2d
lpxy =
– f(digital matrix size), i.e. pixel dimensions 1/d 2
10 0.1 1/SNR
y = 2.795x -0.4937
R2 = 0.9983 SD mR/Ave mR
SD mR/mR
SD pixel
1 0.01 SD pixel
y = 0.0126x -0.4943
R2 = 0.9982 Power (SD pixel)
Exposure (mR)
DR Image CT Image Christodoulou EG, Goodsitt MM, Chan HP, and Hepburn TW (2000)
Phototimer setup for CR imaging. Med Phys 27 2652-2658.
Variation in Exposure-dependent SNR is
SNR should improve with exposure improved by gain and offset calibration
SNR
I1
SNR
A1 100 I10
SNR (dB)
18 100
F12 A1
50 I1 50 A6
15 A cceptance level at PS I10 C3
0 0 C1
7/29/1998 0.1 1 10
C3
100 0.1 1 10 100
C2
12 Log. (7/29/1998) Dete ctor Exposure (m R)
C1 De tector Expos ure (mR)
C2 F12
9 y = 2.4057Ln(x) + 19.987
R2 = 0.9984
Before calibration After calibration
6
0.01 0.10 1.00 10.00
Expos ure (m R)
Lesson #7. Performance data on large numbers of DR systems under
simulated clinical conditions are needed to establish action limits
New artifacts
from the discrete
Configuration management
nature of DR
• Interference
pattern between
fixed grid lines and
down-sampling
rate for display
• Disappeared on
zoom
• Bad choices
– Display default
magnification
factor
– Line rate of grid
• Government regulations
• Specifications and service manuals
• Scientific literature
Mah E, Samei E, Peck DJ “Evaluation of a – Medical Physics, SPIE Proceedings, Journal of Digital
quality control phantom for digital chest Imaging
radiography” JACMP 2(2) 90-101. – Samei E, Seibert JA, Willis CE, Flynn MJ, Mah E, and Junck
KL. Performance evaluation of computed radiography
systems. Medical Physics 28(3):361-371, 2001.
• Comparison with other devices or customer
experience
• Flat-field => Gain and uniformity • Still necessary with digital radiography
– Manufacturer’s conditions
– Measure exposure • Repeat acceptance tests periodically
• Calibrated Stepwedge => detector and incidental to service events
characteristic, display processing, contrast,
noise • Routine QC must be performed by
• Bar patterns => spatial resolution operators/supervisors of system
• Erasure => “base plus fog”
• Entrance exposure => patient dose
– Not an extra test!
Institute processes to detect, correct, Perform and document cleaning and
report, and document errors. maintenance on a regular basis.
relatively new, 24
23
manufacturers are
MTF @ 2.5 lp/mm
22
21
uncertain about 20
19
longitudinal data 18
17
columnar structure is
25
24
degraded 23
Spatial MTF at 2.5 lp/mm
22
required detector
20
19
replacement 18
17
16
15 2 years
3/20/03 6/28/03 10/6/03 1/14/04 4/23/04 8/1/04 11/9/04 2/17/05 5/28/05 9/5/05
Date
Involve all local resources in a team
approach to the QC effort. References:
• Radiologist
– Ultimate responsibility for quality of images
– Department can provide only the lowest quality that is
acceptable to radiologist Comprehensive
• Radiology Administrator QC Plan for CR
– Responsible for efficiency of imaging operations
• Radiology Lead Technologist
– First-line supervision of quality control operations
• Clinical Engineer
– Responsible for equipment life cycle management
• Medical Physicist
– No other person has image quality as first priority