Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota 55905, USA.
Med Phys. 2010 Dec;37(12):6187-98. doi: 10.1118/1.3512759.
Recent studies have raised concerns about exposure to low-dose ionizing radiation from medical imaging procedures. Little has been published regarding the relative exposure and risks associated with breast imaging techniques such as breast specific gamma imaging (BSGI), molecular breast imaging (MBI), or positron emission mammography (PEM). The purpose of this article was to estimate and compare the risks of radiation-induced cancer from mammography and techniques such as PEM, BSGI, and MBI in a screening environment.
The authors used a common scheme for all estimates of cancer incidence and mortality based on the excess absolute risk model from the BEIR VII report. The lifetime attributable risk model was used to estimate the lifetime risk of radiation-induced breast cancer incidence and mortality. All estimates of cancer incidence and mortality were based on a population of 100 000 females followed from birth to age 80 and adjusted for the fraction that survives to various ages between 0 and 80. Assuming annual screening from ages 40 to 80 and from ages 50 to 80, the cumulative cancer incidence and mortality attributed to digital mammography, screen-film mammography, MBI, BSGI, and PEM was calculated. The corresponding cancer incidence and mortality from natural background radiation was calculated as a useful reference. Assuming a 15%-32% reduction in mortality from screening, the benefit/risk ratio for the different imaging modalities was evaluated.
Using conventional doses of 925 MBq Tc-99m sestamibi for MBI and BSGI and 370 MBq F-18 FDG for PEM, the cumulative cancer incidence and mortality were found to be 15-30 times higher than digital mammography. The benefit/risk ratio for annual digital mammography was >50:1 for both the 40-80 and 50-80 screening groups, but dropped to 3:1 for the 40-49 age group. If the primary use of MBI, BSGI, and PEM is in women with dense breast tissue, then the administered doses need to be in the range 75-150 MBq for Tc-99m sestamibi and 35 MBq-70 MBq for F-18 FDG in order to obtain benefit/risk ratios comparable to those of mammography in these age groups. These dose ranges should be achievable with enhancements to current technology while maintaining a reasonable examination time.
The results of the dose estimates in this study clearly indicate that if molecular imaging techniques are to be of value in screening for breast cancer, then the administered doses need to be substantially reduced to better match the effective doses of mammography.
最近的研究对来自医学影像学检查的低剂量电离辐射暴露提出了担忧。对于乳腺成像技术(如乳腺特异性伽马成像(BSGI)、分子乳腺成像(MBI)或正电子发射乳房摄影术(PEM)),与相关的辐射暴露和风险相关的研究较少。本文的目的是在筛查环境中估计和比较乳房摄影术以及 PEM、BSGI 和 MBI 等技术引起的辐射致癌风险。
作者使用了一种常见的方案,基于 BEIR VII 报告中的超额绝对风险模型,对所有癌症发病率和死亡率的估计。使用终生归因风险模型估计辐射引起的乳腺癌发病率和死亡率的终生风险。所有癌症发病率和死亡率的估计都是基于从出生到 80 岁的 100000 名女性的人群,根据 0 至 80 岁之间不同年龄的存活人数进行了调整。假设从 40 岁到 80 岁和从 50 岁到 80 岁进行年度筛查,计算了数字乳房摄影术、胶片乳房摄影术、MBI、BSGI 和 PEM 归因于累积癌症发病率和死亡率。计算了天然本底辐射引起的相应癌症发病率和死亡率,作为有用的参考。假设筛查可降低 15%-32%的死亡率,评估了不同成像方式的获益/风险比。
使用 MBI 和 BSGI 的常规剂量 925MBqTc-99m sestamibi 和 PEM 的 370MBqF-18FDG,累积癌症发病率和死亡率比数字乳房摄影术高 15-30 倍。对于这两个 40-80 岁和 50-80 岁的筛查组,每年进行数字乳房摄影术的获益/风险比>50:1,但对于 40-49 岁的年龄组,获益/风险比降至 3:1。如果 MBI、BSGI 和 PEM 的主要用途是在乳腺组织致密的女性中,那么为了获得与这些年龄组的乳房摄影术相当的获益/风险比,需要将 Tc-99m sestamibi 的给药剂量范围设定在 75-150MBq,F-18 FDG 的剂量范围设定在 35MBq-70MBq。这些剂量范围应该可以通过改进现有技术来实现,同时保持合理的检查时间。
本研究剂量估计的结果清楚地表明,如果分子成像技术要用于乳腺癌筛查,那么需要大大降低给药剂量,以更好地匹配乳房摄影术的有效剂量。