Smith-Bindman Rebecca, Lipson Jafi, Marcus Ralph, Kim Kwang-Pyo, Mahesh Mahadevappa, Gould Robert, Berrington de González Amy, Miglioretti Diana L
Department of Radiology, University of California, San Francisco, 94115, USA.
Arch Intern Med. 2009 Dec 14;169(22):2078-86. doi: 10.1001/archinternmed.2009.427.
Use of computed tomography (CT) for diagnostic evaluation has increased dramatically over the past 2 decades. Even though CT is associated with substantially higher radiation exposure than conventional radiography, typical doses are not known. We sought to estimate the radiation dose associated with common CT studies in clinical practice and quantify the potential cancer risk associated with these examinations.
We conducted a retrospective cross-sectional study describing radiation dose associated with the 11 most common types of diagnostic CT studies performed on 1119 consecutive adult patients at 4 San Francisco Bay Area institutions in California between January 1 and May 30, 2008. We estimated lifetime attributable risks of cancer by study type from these measured doses.
Radiation doses varied significantly between the different types of CT studies. The overall median effective doses ranged from 2 millisieverts (mSv) for a routine head CT scan to 31 mSv for a multiphase abdomen and pelvis CT scan. Within each type of CT study, effective dose varied significantly within and across institutions, with a mean 13-fold variation between the highest and lowest dose for each study type. The estimated number of CT scans that will lead to the development of a cancer varied widely depending on the specific type of CT examination and the patient's age and sex. An estimated 1 in 270 women who underwent CT coronary angiography at age 40 years will develop cancer from that CT scan (1 in 600 men), compared with an estimated 1 in 8100 women who had a routine head CT scan at the same age (1 in 11 080 men). For 20-year-old patients, the risks were approximately doubled, and for 60-year-old patients, they were approximately 50% lower.
Radiation doses from commonly performed diagnostic CT examinations are higher and more variable than generally quoted, highlighting the need for greater standardization across institutions.
在过去20年中,计算机断层扫描(CT)用于诊断评估的情况急剧增加。尽管CT与比传统X线摄影高得多的辐射暴露相关,但典型剂量尚不清楚。我们试图估计临床实践中常见CT检查的辐射剂量,并量化与这些检查相关的潜在癌症风险。
我们进行了一项回顾性横断面研究,描述了2008年1月1日至5月30日期间在加利福尼亚州旧金山湾区4家机构对1119例连续成年患者进行的11种最常见诊断性CT检查的辐射剂量。我们根据这些测量剂量按研究类型估计癌症的终生归因风险。
不同类型的CT检查之间辐射剂量差异显著。总体中位有效剂量范围从常规头部CT扫描的2毫西弗(mSv)到多期腹部和盆腔CT扫描的31 mSv。在每种CT检查类型中,机构内部和机构之间的有效剂量差异显著,每种检查类型中最高剂量与最低剂量之间平均相差13倍。根据CT检查的具体类型以及患者的年龄和性别,导致癌症发生的CT扫描估计数量差异很大。40岁接受CT冠状动脉造影的女性中,估计每270人中有1人会因该CT扫描患癌(男性为每600人中有1人),而同龄进行常规头部CT扫描的女性中估计每8100人中有1人患癌(男性为每11080人中有1人)。对于20岁的患者,风险大约加倍,而对于60岁的患者,风险大约降低50%。
常用诊断性CT检查的辐射剂量比一般引用的更高且更具变异性,突出了各机构进行更大程度标准化的必要性。