Soret Marine, Maisonobe Jacques-Antoine, Payen Stéphane, Gaubert Adèle, Brunel Sandrine, Bergeret Sébastien, Berenbaum Arnaud, Hubert Emilie, Kas Aurélie
AP-HP Sorbonne Université, Hôpital Pitié-Salpêtrière, Médecine Nucléaire, F-75013 Paris, France.
Sorbonne Université, CNRS, INSERM, Laboratoire d'Imagerie Biomédicale, LIB, F-75006 Paris, France.
J Radiol Prot. 2022 Apr 27;42(2). doi: 10.1088/1361-6498/ac5e50.
Since 2010, positron emission tomography/magnetic resonance (PET/MR) has been increasingly used as clinical routine in nuclear medicine departments. One advantage of PET/MR over PET/computed tomography (CT) is the lower dose of ionising radiation delivered to patients. However, data on the radiation dose delivered to staff operating PET/MR compared with the new generation of PET/CT equipment are still lacking. Our aim was to compare the radiation dose to nuclear medicine technologists performing routine PET/MR and PET/CT in the same department. We retrospectively measured the daily radiation dose received by PET technologists over 13 months by collecting individual dosimetry measurements (from electronic personal dosimeters). Data were analysed taking into account the total number of studies performed with each PET modality (PET/MR with Signa 3T, General Electric Healthcare versus PET/CT with Biograph mCT flow, Siemens), the type of exploration (brain versus whole-body PET), theF activity injected per day and per patient as well as the time spent in contact with patients after tracer injection. Our results show a significantly higher whole-body exposure to technologists for PET/MR compared with PET/CT (10.3 ± 3.5 nSv versus 4.7 ± 1.2 nSv perF injected MBq, respectively;< 0.05). This difference was related to prolonged contact with injected patients during patient positioning with the PET/MR device and MR coil placement, especially in whole-body studies. For an equal injected activity, radiation exposure to PET technologists for PET/MR was twice that of PET/CT. To minimise the radiation dose to staff, efforts should be made to optimise patient positioning, even in departments with extensive PET/CT experience.
自2010年以来,正电子发射断层扫描/磁共振成像(PET/MR)在核医学科室越来越多地被用作临床常规检查。PET/MR相对于PET/计算机断层扫描(CT)的一个优势是向患者提供的电离辐射剂量较低。然而,与新一代PET/CT设备相比,关于操作PET/MR的工作人员所接受的辐射剂量的数据仍然缺乏。我们的目的是比较在同一科室进行常规PET/MR和PET/CT检查的核医学技术人员所接受的辐射剂量。我们通过收集个人剂量测定数据(来自电子个人剂量计),回顾性测量了PET技术人员在13个月内每天接受的辐射剂量。分析数据时考虑了每种PET检查方式(配备Signa 3T的PET/MR,通用电气医疗集团;以及配备Biograph mCT flow的PET/CT,西门子)所进行检查的总数、检查类型(脑部PET与全身PET)、每天和每位患者注射的F活性,以及注射示踪剂后与患者接触的时间。我们的结果显示,与PET/CT相比,PET/MR检查时技术人员的全身暴露剂量显著更高(每注射1MBq F分别为10.3±3.5 nSv和4.7±1.2 nSv;P<0.05)。这种差异与在使用PET/MR设备进行患者定位和放置MR线圈期间与注射后的患者接触时间延长有关,尤其是在全身检查中。对于相同的注射活性,PET/MR检查时PET技术人员所接受的辐射暴露是PET/CT的两倍。为了将工作人员的辐射剂量降至最低,即使在有丰富PET/CT经验的科室,也应努力优化患者定位。