RESUMEN
CT-based opportunistic skeletal assessment complements current osteoporosis diagnosis. Quantitative assessment by internal density calibration overcomes the limitations of phantom-based calibration. We sought to establish and validate an internal calibration technique using abdominal CT scans and establish reproducibility precision for three density calibration techniques. Ten full-body cadavers were CT scanned at the spine and pelvis with a calibration phantom. Internal calibration was performed using in-scan tissue references and deriving a voxel-specific calibration. Bone mineral density (BMD) and finite element (FE) failure load assessed skeletal health. Three independent users measured intra-exam precision by manual tissue selection. To verify results, ten subjects were imaged using an abdominal imaging protocol. Internal calibration performed equivalently to gold-standard phantom-based calibration in the cadaver spine and hip. Internal calibration BMD precision in the spine was 7 mg/cc (4.9%) and FE precision was 163 N (7.2%), whereas phantom-based precision was 3 mg/cc (1.8%) and 77 N (3.8%). Internal calibration hip BMD and FE precision was 11 mg/cc (5.3%) and 84 N (6.0%), whereas phantom-based precision was 2 mg/cc (1.3%) and 30 N (3.4%). Using the abdominal imaging protocol, internal calibration performed comparably to phantom-based calibration. Internal calibration provides BMD and FE outcome precision within 7.2% for opportunistic skeletal health assessment.