Applied Physics, RMIT University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Br J Radiol. 2012 Nov;85(1019):1488-98. doi: 10.1259/bjr/28015185. Epub 2012 Jul 27.
To establish local diagnostic reference levels (LDRLs) at the Royal Children's Hospital (RCH) Melbourne, Parkville, Australia, for typical paediatric CT examinations and compare these with international diagnostic reference levels (DRLs) to benchmark local practice. In addition, the aim was to develop a method of analysing local scan parameters to enable identification of areas for optimisation.
A retrospective audit of patient records for paediatric CT brain, chest and abdomen/pelvis examinations was undertaken. Demographic information, examination parameters and dose indicators--volumetric CT dose index (CTDI(vol)) and dose-length product (DLP)--were collected for 220 patients. LDRLs were derived from mean survey values and the effective dose was estimated from DLP values. The normalised CTDI(vol) values, mAs values and scan length were analysed to better identify parameters that could be optimised.
The LDRLs across all age categories were 18-45 mGy (CTDI(vol)) and 250-700 mGy cm (DLP) for brain examinations; 3-23 mGy (CTDI(vol)) and 100-800 mGy cm (DLP) for chest examinations; and 4-15 mGy (CTDI(vol)) and 150-750 mGy cm (DLP) for abdomen/pelvis examinations. Effective dose estimates were 1.0-1.6 mSv, 1.8-13.0 mSv and 2.5-10.0 mSv for brain, chest and abdomen/pelvis examinations, respectively.
The RCH mean CTDI(vol) and DLP values are similar to or lower than international DRLs. Use of low-kilovoltage protocols for body imaging in younger patients reduced the dose considerably. There exists potential for optimisation in reducing body scan lengths and justifying the selection of reference mAs values. The assessment method used here proved useful for identifying specific parameters for optimisation. Advances in knowledge Assessment of individual CT parameters in addition to comparison with DRLs enables identification of specific areas for CT optimisation.
在澳大利亚墨尔本皇家儿童医院(RCH)建立局部诊断参考水平(LDRL),用于典型的儿科 CT 检查,并与国际诊断参考水平(DRL)进行比较,以基准当地实践。此外,旨在开发一种分析局部扫描参数的方法,以确定优化的领域。
对儿科 CT 脑、胸部和腹部/骨盆检查的患者记录进行回顾性审计。收集了 220 名患者的人口统计学信息、检查参数和剂量指标——容积 CT 剂量指数(CTDI(vol))和剂量长度乘积(DLP)。LDRL 源自平均调查值,有效剂量由 DLP 值估算。分析归一化 CTDI(vol)值、mAs 值和扫描长度,以更好地识别可优化的参数。
所有年龄段的 LDRL 为脑检查 18-45 mGy(CTDI(vol))和 250-700 mGy cm(DLP);胸部检查 3-23 mGy(CTDI(vol))和 100-800 mGy cm(DLP);腹部/骨盆检查 4-15 mGy(CTDI(vol))和 150-750 mGy cm(DLP)。脑、胸部和腹部/骨盆检查的有效剂量估计值分别为 1.0-1.6 mSv、1.8-13.0 mSv 和 2.5-10.0 mSv。
RCH 的平均 CTDI(vol)和 DLP 值与国际 DRL 相似或更低。在年轻患者中使用低千伏协议进行身体成像可显著降低剂量。在降低身体扫描长度和证明参考 mAs 值的选择方面存在优化的潜力。这里使用的评估方法对于确定特定的优化参数非常有用。
知识的进步除了与 DRL 进行比较外,评估单个 CT 参数还可以确定 CT 优化的特定领域。