Berrington de González Amy, Mahesh Mahadevappa, Kim Kwang-Pyo, Bhargavan Mythreyi, Lewis Rebecca, Mettler Fred, Land Charles
Radiation Epidemiology Branch, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Arch Intern Med. 2009 Dec 14;169(22):2071-7. doi: 10.1001/archinternmed.2009.440.
The use of computed tomographic (CT) scans in the United States (US) has increased more than 3-fold since 1993 to approximately 70 million scans annually. Despite the great medical benefits, there is concern about the potential radiation-related cancer risk. We conducted detailed estimates of the future cancer risks from current CT scan use in the US according to age, sex, and scan type.
Risk models based on the National Research Council's "Biological Effects of Ionizing Radiation" report and organ-specific radiation doses derived from a national survey were used to estimate age-specific cancer risks for each scan type. These models were combined with age- and sex-specific scan frequencies for the US in 2007 obtained from survey and insurance claims data. We estimated the mean number of radiation-related incident cancers with 95% uncertainty limits (UL) using Monte Carlo simulations.
Overall, we estimated that approximately 29 000 (95% UL, 15 000-45 000) future cancers could be related to CT scans performed in the US in 2007. The largest contributions were from scans of the abdomen and pelvis (n = 14 000) (95% UL, 6900-25 000), chest (n = 4100) (95% UL, 1900-8100), and head (n = 4000) (95% UL, 1100-8700), as well as from chest CT angiography (n = 2700) (95% UL, 1300-5000). One-third of the projected cancers were due to scans performed at the ages of 35 to 54 years compared with 15% due to scans performed at ages younger than 18 years, and 66% were in females.
These detailed estimates highlight several areas of CT scan use that make large contributions to the total cancer risk, including several scan types and age groups with a high frequency of use or scans involving relatively high doses, in which risk-reduction efforts may be warranted.
自1993年以来,美国计算机断层扫描(CT)的使用量增加了两倍多,目前每年约达7000万次扫描。尽管CT扫描带来了巨大的医疗益处,但人们仍担心其潜在的辐射相关癌症风险。我们根据年龄、性别和扫描类型,对美国当前CT扫描使用情况导致的未来癌症风险进行了详细估算。
基于美国国家研究委员会的《电离辐射的生物效应》报告建立风险模型,并结合从一项全国性调查得出的特定器官辐射剂量,来估算每种扫描类型的特定年龄癌症风险。这些模型与2007年美国按年龄和性别划分的扫描频率相结合,扫描频率数据来自调查和保险理赔数据。我们使用蒙特卡洛模拟方法估算了辐射相关新发癌症的平均数量,并给出95%的不确定区间(UL)。
总体而言,我们估计2007年美国进行的CT扫描可能导致约29000例(95% UL,15000 - 45000例)未来癌症。其中,腹部和骨盆扫描贡献最大(n = 14000)(95% UL,6900 - 25000例),胸部扫描(n = 4100)(95% UL,1900 - 8100例),头部扫描(n = 4000)(95% UL,1100 - 8700例),以及胸部CT血管造影(n = 2700)(95% UL,1300 - 5000例)。预计癌症病例中有三分之一是由35至54岁人群的扫描导致的,18岁以下人群扫描导致的病例占15%,66%的病例发生在女性中。
这些详细估算突出了CT扫描使用中的几个领域,这些领域对总癌症风险贡献巨大,包括几种使用频率高或涉及相对高剂量的扫描类型和年龄组,在这些方面可能需要采取降低风险的措施。