Tundra Space

Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

Back to Studies
RECRUITING
NCT06965790
NA

Study on Sex-specific, Individualized Dose Calculation of Contrast Agent in CT Examinations

Sponsor: University Hospital Augsburg

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

A large proportion of radiological CT examinations require the intravenous administration of iodine-containing X-ray contrast medium. According to current guidelines, the amount required for CT examinations in the (portal) venous phase is calculated on the basis of body weight (e.g. 0.2-0.4 g iodine/kg body weight), but a standardized application dose of the contrast agent is often also used. In earlier studies, the investigators found that the iodine contrast in vessels and organs achieved with a standardized amount of contrast agent differs significantly between women and men. On average, women showed around 10% higher iodine contrast than men of the same height and weight. The investigators attribute these differences to physiological, sex-specific differences in blood volume. For example, the blood volume of a woman 175 cm tall and weighing 75 kg is approx. 400 ml less than that of a man of the same height and weight (approx. 4.6 vs. 5.0 l, calculated according to Nadler). Taking blood volume into account, sex was no longer a significant influencing factor in a retrospective cohort (n=274). The investigators would now like to investigate these results in a prospective study. For this purpose, two groups of patients with a clinical indication for a contrast-enhanced CT scan in the venous phase will be compared: 1. control group with regular weight-adjusted (n = 200) 2. study group with dosing according to blood volume (n = 200). The hypothesis is that the application scheme adapted to the blood volume leads to a more homogeneous contrasting of women and men. In order to quantify this effect, the iodine contrast values of both groups will be quantitatively analyzed, taking into account other influencing variables (height, weight). The investigators hope that this approach will reduce or even eliminate the observed sex-specific differences. This would lead to a sex-equal contrast based on an individualized amount of contrast medium.

Official title: Randomized Controlled Study on Sex-specific, Individualized Dose Calculation of Intravenously Administered Contrast Agent in CT Examinations in Portal Venous Phase to Achieve Equivalent Contrast in Men and Women

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

400

Start Date

2025-04-01

Completion Date

2027-03

Last Updated

2025-12-09

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DRUG

contrast media (Imeron 350, active ingredient Iomeprol) volume according to sex-specific blood volume

Calculation of the standardized contrast agent (Imeron 350, active ingredient Iomeprol) quantity (0.35 g iodine/kg) and calculation of the specific blood volume using the established Nadler formula for male and female. Adjustment of the contrast agent according to the ratio of the blood volumes. The amount of saved contrast agent is replaced 1:1 by NaCl.

Locations (1)

University Hosptial Augsburg

Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany