Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, Carlton, Victoria, Australia.
Department of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Alfred Health, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
PLoS One. 2022 Sep 9;17(9):e0271918. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0271918. eCollection 2022.
Although the carcinogenic effects of high-dose radiation are well-established, the risks at low doses, such as from diagnostic X-rays, are less well understood. Children are susceptible to radiation induced cancers, and in the last decade, several cohort studies have reported increased cancer risks following computed tomography (CT) scans in childhood. However, cohort studies can be limited by insufficient follow-up, indication bias, reverse causation, or by lack of organ doses from CT scans or other exposures. Aust-PERC is a retrospective cohort designed to study the effects of low-dose medical radiation exposure, primarily from CT scans, in young Australians. The cohort was ascertained using deidentified billing records from patients who were aged 0-19 years while enrolled in Medicare (Australia's universal healthcare system) between 1985 and 2005. All procedures billed to Medicare in this age/time window that involved low-dose radiation were identified, and persons without such procedures were flagged as unexposed. The Aust-PERC cohort has been linked, using confidential personal identifiers, to the Australian Cancer Database and the National Death Index, on two occasions (to Dec. 2007 and Dec. 2012) by the responsible government agency (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare). Deidentified Medicare service records of all radiological procedures including CT scans, nuclear medicine (NM) scans and fluoroscopy and plain X-ray procedures have been available to derive estimated radiation doses in the cohort. Records of other medical and surgical procedures, together with demographic and socioeconomic variables are being used in analyses to assess biases arising from reverse causation and confounding. After excluding patients with errant records, 11 802 846 persons remained in the baseline cohort, with an average follow-up time of 22.3 years to December 2012. There were 275 489 patients exposed to diagnostic nuclear medicine scans and 688 363 patients exposed to CT scans before age 20 and before cancer diagnosis. Between 1 January 1985 and 31 December 2012, there were 105 124 deaths and 103 505 incident cancers. Dose-response analyses based on the relevant organ doses are underway for individual cancers, and we plan to extend the follow-up for another 8 years to Dec 2020. Analyses using this very large Aust-PERC cohort, with extended follow-up, will help to resolve international uncertainties about the causal role of diagnostic medical radiation as a cause of cancer.
虽然高剂量辐射的致癌作用已得到充分证实,但低剂量辐射(如诊断 X 射线)的风险却知之甚少。儿童易患辐射诱导癌症,在过去十年中,几项队列研究报告称,儿童期接受计算机断层扫描(CT)后癌症风险增加。然而,队列研究可能受到随访不足、指示偏差、反向因果关系或缺乏 CT 扫描或其他暴露的器官剂量的限制。Aust-PERC 是一项回顾性队列研究,旨在研究低剂量医疗辐射暴露对年轻澳大利亚人的影响,主要来自 CT 扫描。该队列是通过 1985 年至 2005 年间在 Medicare(澳大利亚全民医疗保健系统)注册的年龄在 0-19 岁的患者的匿名计费记录确定的。在此年龄/时间窗口内,所有涉及低剂量辐射的计费程序均被确定为暴露于此程序,而没有此类程序的人则被标记为未暴露于此程序。负责政府机构(澳大利亚健康福利研究所)两次利用保密的个人身份识别码将 Aust-PERC 队列与澳大利亚癌症数据库和国家死亡索引联系起来(截至 2007 年 12 月和 2012 年 12 月)。所有放射学程序(包括 CT 扫描、核医学扫描和透视术和普通 X 射线程序)的匿名 Medicare 服务记录都可用于计算队列中的估计辐射剂量。正在使用其他医疗和手术程序的记录以及人口统计学和社会经济变量来进行分析,以评估反向因果关系和混杂引起的偏倚。在排除记录有误的患者后,11802846 人留在基线队列中,截至 2012 年 12 月,平均随访时间为 22.3 年。有 275489 名患者在 20 岁之前和癌症诊断之前接受了诊断性核医学扫描,688363 名患者在 20 岁之前和癌症诊断之前接受了 CT 扫描。在 1985 年 1 月 1 日至 2012 年 12 月 31 日期间,有 105124 人死亡,103505 人患有癌症。正在根据相关器官剂量对个别癌症进行剂量反应分析,我们计划将随访时间再延长 8 年,直至 2020 年 12 月。使用这个非常大的 Aust-PERC 队列进行扩展随访的分析将有助于解决国际上对诊断性医疗辐射作为癌症病因的因果关系的不确定性。