New York Presbyterian Hospital, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, USA.
Ann Thorac Surg. 2011 Oct;92(4):1170-8; discussion 1178-9. doi: 10.1016/j.athoracsur.2011.03.096. Epub 2011 Jul 13.
Radiation dose from diagnostic imaging procedures is not monitored in patients undergoing surgery for lung cancer. Evidence suggests an increased lifetime risk of malignancy of 1.0% per 100 millisieverts (mSv). As such, recommendations are to restrict healthcare and radiation workers to a maximum dose of 50 mSv per year or to 100 mSv over a three-year period. The purpose of this study was to estimate cumulative effective doses of radiation in patients undergoing lung cancer resection and to determine predictors of increased exposure.
We identified 94 consecutive patients undergoing resection for non-small cell lung cancer. Radiologic procedures performed from one year prior to resection until two years postresection were recorded. Estimates of effective doses (mSv) were obtained from published literature and institutional records. Predictors of dose greater than 50 mSv per year and greater than 100 mSv per three years were examined statistically.
The majority of patients (median age = 67 years) had stage IA cancer (52%). In the three-year period, patients had 1,958 radiologic studies (20.8/patient) including 398 computed tomographic (CT) scans (4.23/patient) and 211 positron emission tomography (PET) scans (2.24 per patient). The three-year median estimated radiation dose was 84.0 mSv (interquartile range, 44.1 to 123.2 mSv). The highest dose was in the preoperative year. In any one year, 66% of patients received more than 50 mSv, while 19% received over 100 mSv. Over the three-year period, 43.6% of patients exceeded 100 mSv. The majority of the radiation (89.8%) was from CT or PET scans. On multivariate analysis, a history of previous malignancy (odds ratio [OR] 3.8; confidence interval [CI] 1.14 to 12.7), postoperative complications (OR 6.16; CI 1.42 to 26.6), and postoperative surveillance with PET-CT (OR 13.2; CI 4.34 to 40.3) predicted exposure greater than 100 mSv over the three-year period.
This study demonstrates that lung cancer patients often receive a higher dose of radiation than that considered safe for healthcare and radiation workers. The median cumulative dose reported in this study could potentially increase the individual estimated lifetime cancer risk by as much as 0.8%. Although risk-benefit considerations are clearly different between these groups, strategies should be in place to decrease radiation doses during the preoperative workup and postoperative period.
肺癌手术患者的诊断成像程序辐射剂量未受到监测。有证据表明,每接受 100 毫西弗(mSv)的辐射,终生恶性肿瘤的风险就会增加 1.0%。因此,建议将医疗保健和放射工作人员的剂量限制在每年 50 mSv 或三年内 100 mSv 以内。本研究的目的是估计接受肺癌切除术患者的累积有效剂量,并确定增加暴露的预测因素。
我们确定了 94 例接受非小细胞肺癌切除术的连续患者。记录了从术前一年到术后两年进行的放射学检查。从已发表的文献和机构记录中获得有效剂量(mSv)的估计值。统计分析了每年超过 50 mSv 和每三年超过 100 mSv 的剂量的预测因素。
大多数患者(中位年龄为 67 岁)患有 IA 期癌症(52%)。在三年内,患者接受了 1958 项放射学检查(20.8/例),包括 398 次计算机断层扫描(CT)检查(4.23/例)和 211 次正电子发射断层扫描(PET)检查(2.24 例)。三年中位数估计的辐射剂量为 84.0 mSv(四分位距,44.1 至 123.2 mSv)。最高剂量在术前一年。在任何一年中,有 66%的患者接受了超过 50 mSv 的剂量,而 19%的患者接受了超过 100 mSv 的剂量。在三年内,有 43.6%的患者超过了 100 mSv。大多数辐射(89.8%)来自 CT 或 PET 扫描。多变量分析显示,既往恶性肿瘤病史(比值比 [OR] 3.8;置信区间 [CI] 1.14 至 12.7)、术后并发症(OR 6.16;CI 1.42 至 26.6)和术后 PET-CT 监测(OR 13.2;CI 4.34 至 40.3)可预测三年内超过 100 mSv 的暴露。
本研究表明,肺癌患者通常接受的辐射剂量高于医疗保健和放射工作人员认为安全的剂量。本研究报告的中位数累积剂量可能会使个体估计的终生癌症风险增加 0.8%。尽管这些组之间的风险-效益考虑明显不同,但应制定策略在术前检查和术后期间减少辐射剂量。