Bolch W E, Patton R W, Shah A R, Rajon D A, Jokisch D W
Department of Nuclear and Radiological Engineering, University of Florida, Gainesville 32611-8300, USA.
Med Phys. 2002 Jun;29(6):1054-70. doi: 10.1118/1.1477233.
It is generally acknowledged that reference man (70 kg in mass and 170 cm in height) does not adequately represent the stature and physical dimensions of many patients undergoing radionuclide therapy, and thus scaling of radionuclide S values is required for patient specificity. For electron and beta sources uniformly distributed within internal organs, the mean dose from self-irradiation is noted to scale inversely with organ mass, provided no escape of electron energy occurs at the organ boundaries. In the skeleton, this same scaling approach is further assumed to be correct for marrow dosimetry; nevertheless, difficulties in quantitative assessments of marrow mass in specific skeletal regions of the patient make this approach difficult to implement clinically. Instead, scaling of marrow dose is achieved using various anthropometric parameters that presumably scale in the same proportion. In this study, recently developed three-dimensional macrostructural transport models of the femoral head and humeral epiphysis in three individuals (51-year male, 82-year female, and 86-year female) are used to test the abilities of different anthropometric parameters (total body mass, body surface area, etc.) to properly scale radionuclide S values from reference man models. The radionuclides considered are 33P, 177Lu, 153Sm, 186Re, 89Sr, 166Ho, 32P, 188Re, and 90Y localized in either the active marrow or endosteal tissues of the bone trabeculae. S value scaling is additionally conducted in which the 51-year male subject is assigned as the reference individual; scaling parameters are then expanded to include tissue volumes and masses for both active marrow and skeletal spongiosa. The study concludes that, while no single anthropometric parameter emerges as a consistent scaler of reference man S values, lean body mass is indicated as an optimal scaler when the reference S values are based on 3D transport techniques. Furthermore, very exact patient-specific scaling of radionuclide S values can be achieved if measurements of spongiosa volume and marrow volume fraction (high-resolution CT with image segmentation) are known in both the patient and the reference individual at skeletal sites for which dose estimates are sought. However, the study indicates that measurements of the spongiosa volume alone may be sufficient for reasonable patient-specific scaling of S values for the majority of radionuclides of interest in internal-emitter therapy.
人们普遍认为,参考人(体重70千克,身高170厘米)并不能充分代表许多接受放射性核素治疗患者的身材和身体尺寸,因此需要根据患者的具体情况对放射性核素S值进行缩放。对于均匀分布在内脏器官中的电子和β源,若电子能量在器官边界无逸出,自辐照的平均剂量与器官质量成反比。在骨骼中,同样的缩放方法进一步假定对骨髓剂量测定是正确的;然而,在定量评估患者特定骨骼区域的骨髓质量时存在困难,使得这种方法在临床上难以实施。相反,使用各种推测按相同比例缩放的人体测量参数来实现骨髓剂量的缩放。在本研究中,利用最近开发的三个个体(51岁男性、82岁女性和86岁女性)股骨头和肱骨骺的三维宏观结构传输模型,来测试不同人体测量参数(总体重、体表面积等)从参考人模型正确缩放放射性核素S值的能力。所考虑的放射性核素为33P、177Lu、153Sm、186Re、89Sr、166Ho、32P、188Re和90Y,它们位于骨小梁的活性骨髓或骨内膜组织中。还进行了S值缩放,其中将51岁男性受试者指定为参考个体;然后将缩放参数扩展到包括活性骨髓和骨松质的组织体积和质量。该研究得出结论,虽然没有单一的人体测量参数能始终如一地作为参考人S值的缩放因子,但当参考S值基于三维传输技术时,瘦体重被认为是最佳的缩放因子。此外,如果在患者和参考个体中都已知寻求剂量估计的骨骼部位的骨松质体积和骨髓体积分数测量值(带图像分割的高分辨率CT),则可以实现非常精确的针对患者的放射性核素S值缩放。然而,该研究表明,对于体内发射体治疗中大多数感兴趣的放射性核素,仅骨松质体积的测量可能足以进行合理的针对患者的S值缩放。