AJR Review
Finds 25 Years of CT Dose Reduction Preserves Diagnostic Performance
Leesburg, VA |
February 4, 2026—A new review published in the American Journal of Roentgenology (AJR) finds that advances in CT
technology over the past 25 years have enabled routine radiation dose
reductions by a factor of 2 to 10, while preserving diagnostic performance when
applied appropriately.
Cynthia H.
McCollough, PhD, and
Lifeng Yu, PhD, of Mayo Clinic Minnesota traced
major milestones in CT dose reduction since the early 2000s, highlighting the
cumulative impact of hardware innovations, scanning technique optimization, and
advances in image reconstruction algorithms.
According to Drs. McCollough and Yu, the introduction of photon-counting detector (PCD) CT
represents a major leap forward in dose efficiency. PCD CT improves signal
quality by rejecting electronic noise, optimizing photon-energy weighting, and
enabling ultrahigh-resolution acquisitions without proportional dose penalties.
Importantly, this
AJR review cautions that dose reduction alone is not a sufficient metric of
progress. The authors emphasize that diagnostic performance must be preserved
through objective, task-based image quality assessment, particularly as deep
learning–based reconstruction and postprocessing tools are increasingly
deployed in clinical practice.
Using historical
and contemporary CT examples, McCollough and Yu demonstrate that modern
scanners can achieve image quality equal to or superior to that of legacy
systems at a fraction of the radiation dose, especially when advances are
applied in combination and tailored to specific clinical tasks.
The authors conclude
that continued progress in CT dose reduction will depend on close collaboration
among radiologists, technologists, and medical physicists, as well as careful
validation of emerging technologies to ensure patient safety without
compromising diagnostic accuracy.
Watch Dr. McCollough discuss her article reviewing key
milestones and technologic innovations that have led to this substantial
reduction in CT radiation doses—providing examples of the cumulative impact of
these advances on image quality for routine examinations in various anatomic
sites.North America’s first radiological society, the American Roentgen Ray
Society (ARRS) remains dedicated to the advancement of medicine through
the profession of medical imaging and its allied sciences. An international
forum for progress in radiology since the discovery of the x-ray, ARRS
maintains its mission of improving health through a community committed to
advancing knowledge and skills with the ARRS Annual Meeting, two radiology journals—
American Journal of
Roentgenology (
AJR) and
Roentgen Ray Review (
R3)—ARRS Symposia, free-access
multimedia from our Global Partner Societies, as well as awarding scholarships via The Roentgen Fund®.
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