Yonekura Y, Mattsson S, Flux G, Bolch W E, Dauer L T, Fisher D R, Lassmann M, Palm S, Hosono M, Doruff M, Divgi C, Zanzonico P
Ann ICRP. 2019 Sep;48(1):5-95. doi: 10.1177/0146645319838665.
Radiopharmaceuticals are increasingly used for the treatment of various cancers with novel radionuclides, compounds, tracer molecules, and administration techniques. The goal of radiation therapy, including therapy with radiopharmaceuticals, is to optimise the relationship between tumour control probability and potential complications in normal organs and tissues. Essential to this optimisation is the ability to quantify the radiation doses delivered to both tumours and normal tissues. This publication provides an overview of therapeutic procedures and a framework for calculating radiation doses for various treatment approaches. In radiopharmaceutical therapy, the absorbed dose to an organ or tissue is governed by radiopharmaceutical uptake, retention in and clearance from the various organs and tissues of the body, together with radionuclide physical half-life. Biokinetic parameters are determined by direct measurements made using techniques that vary in complexity. For treatment planning, absorbed dose calculations are usually performed prior to therapy using a trace-labelled diagnostic administration, or retrospective dosimetry may be performed on the basis of the activity already administered following each therapeutic administration. Uncertainty analyses provide additional information about sources of bias and random variation and their magnitudes; these analyses show the reliability and quality of absorbed dose calculations. Effective dose can provide an approximate measure of lifetime risk of detriment attributable to the stochastic effects of radiation exposure, principally cancer, but effective dose does not predict future cancer incidence for an individual and does not apply to short-term deterministic effects associated with radiopharmaceutical therapy. Accident prevention in radiation therapy should be an integral part of the design of facilities, equipment, and administration procedures. Minimisation of staff exposures includes consideration of equipment design, proper shielding and handling of sources, and personal protective equipment and tools, as well as education and training to promote awareness and engagement in radiological protection. The decision to hold or release a patient after radiopharmaceutical therapy should account for potential radiation dose to members of the public and carers that may result from residual radioactivity in the patient. In these situations, specific radiological protection guidance should be provided to patients and carers.
放射性药物越来越多地用于使用新型放射性核素、化合物、示踪分子和给药技术治疗各种癌症。放射治疗的目标,包括放射性药物治疗,是优化肿瘤控制概率与正常器官和组织中潜在并发症之间的关系。这种优化的关键在于能够量化传递到肿瘤和正常组织的辐射剂量。本出版物概述了治疗程序以及各种治疗方法的辐射剂量计算框架。在放射性药物治疗中,器官或组织的吸收剂量由放射性药物摄取、在身体各器官和组织中的滞留和清除以及放射性核素物理半衰期决定。生物动力学参数通过使用复杂性各异的技术进行直接测量来确定。对于治疗计划,吸收剂量计算通常在治疗前使用微量标记诊断给药进行,或者可以根据每次治疗给药后已给予的活度进行回顾性剂量测定。不确定性分析提供了有关偏差和随机变化来源及其大小的额外信息;这些分析显示了吸收剂量计算的可靠性和质量。有效剂量可以大致衡量辐射暴露的随机效应(主要是癌症)所致终身危害风险,但有效剂量不能预测个体未来的癌症发病率,也不适用于与放射性药物治疗相关的短期确定性效应。放射治疗中的事故预防应成为设施、设备和给药程序设计的一个组成部分。尽量减少工作人员的暴露包括考虑设备设计、源的适当屏蔽和处理、个人防护设备和工具,以及进行教育和培训以提高对放射防护的认识和参与度。放射性药物治疗后决定扣留或放行患者应考虑患者体内残留放射性可能对公众和护理人员造成的潜在辐射剂量。在这些情况下,应向患者和护理人员提供具体的放射防护指导。