Alqahtani Saeed J M, Welbourn Richard, Meakin Judith R, Palfrey Rachel M, Rimes Susan J, Thomson Katharine, Knapp Karen M
Medical Imaging Department, University of Exeter, Exeter EX1 2LU, United Kingdom. Diagnostic Radiology Department, Najran University, Najran, 61441, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
J Radiol Prot. 2019 Jan;39(1):38-53. doi: 10.1088/1361-6498/aaf1dd. Epub 2018 Dec 20.
Primarily to evaluate the radiation dose delivered to patients with obesity in projection radiography and its relationship to the patient's size. A secondary purpose is to estimate the subsequent projected radiation-related lifetime cancer risk to patients with obesity compared to normal-weight patients.
Data from 1964 patients from a bariatric clinic in the UK were reviewed with the relevant permission. 630 patients were identified to have a projection radiography history and were included in the study. Patients' dose area product (DAP) data were collected for all projection radiography. Multiple exams in one day including a single DAP reading and exams with no records of DAP and exposure factors were excluded. Correlations were calculated and data analysed to yield the third quartile for each examination using STATA 14. Absorbed doses were generated from PCXMC simulation, utilising DAP data from this study and the UK national diagnostic reference level (NDRL), to calculate the effective risk for patients with obesity compared to patients with normal-weight.
Patients with obesity received higher DAPs for all examinations included in this study compared to NDRL. Abdominal and lumbar spine radiographs DAPs were the highest (17.6 and 30.31 Gy cm) compared to the NDRL (2.5 and 4 Gy cm). Only moderate to low correlations were found between patient's size and DAPs in the abdomen and chest radiographs. The projected radiation-related lifetime cancer risk for patients with obesity is up to 153% higher than for adult patients with normal weight.
Patients with obesity receive higher DAPs than normal-weight adults which may be in excess of that expected due to their size. Therefore, radiation-related lifetime cancer risk is increased in patients with obesity as a result of medical radiation exposures. This indicates more dose optimisation research is needed in this group of patients to reduce dose rate and variation.
主要评估肥胖患者在投影放射成像中所接受的辐射剂量及其与患者体型的关系。次要目的是估计肥胖患者相较于正常体重患者后续因辐射导致的终生患癌风险。
经相关许可,对来自英国一家减肥诊所的1964例患者的数据进行了回顾。确定630例患者有投影放射成像史并纳入研究。收集了所有投影放射成像的患者剂量面积乘积(DAP)数据。排除一天内的多次检查(包括单次DAP读数)以及无DAP和曝光因子记录的检查。计算相关性,并使用STATA 14进行数据分析,以得出每次检查的第三四分位数。利用本研究的DAP数据和英国国家诊断参考水平(NDRL),通过PCXMC模拟生成吸收剂量,以计算肥胖患者与正常体重患者相比的有效风险。
与NDRL相比,本研究中纳入的所有检查中,肥胖患者接受的DAP更高。腹部和腰椎X光片的DAP最高(分别为17.6和30.31 Gy·cm),而NDRL分别为2.5和4 Gy·cm。在腹部和胸部X光片中,仅发现患者体型与DAP之间存在中度至低度相关性。肥胖患者因辐射导致的终生患癌风险预计比正常体重的成年患者高出153%。
肥胖患者接受的DAP高于正常体重的成年人,这可能超过了因其体型所预期的剂量。因此,医疗辐射暴露导致肥胖患者因辐射患癌的终生风险增加。这表明需要对这组患者进行更多的剂量优化研究,以降低剂量率和剂量差异。