Cumulative radiation doses from recurrent PET–CT examinations
Article 2021 en
Authors
MH
Makoto Hosono
MT
Mamoru Takenaka
HM
Hajime Monzen
Abstract
1 min read
Positron emission tomography (PET-CT) is an essential imaging modality for the management of various diseases. Increasing numbers of PET-CT examinations are carried out across the world and deliver benefits to patients; however, there are concerns about the cumulative radiation doses from these examinations in patients. Compared to the radiation exposure delivered by CT, there have been few reports on the frequency of patients with a cumulative effective radiation dose of ≥100 mSv from repeated PET-CT examinations. The emerging dose tracking system facilitates surveys on patient cumulative doses by PET-CT because it can easily wrap up exposure doses of PET radiopharmaceuticals and CT. Regardless of the use of a dose tracking system, implementation of justification for PET-CT examinations and utilisation of dose reduction measures are key issues in coping with the cumulative dose in patients. Despite all the advantages of PET/MRI such as eliminating radiation exposure from CT and providing good tissue contrast in MRI, it is expensive and cannot be introduced at every facility; thus, it is still necessary to utilise PET-CT with radiation reduction measures in most clinical situations.
Héctor M. García‐García, Carlos A.G. van Mieghem, Nieves Gonzalo, Willem B. Meijboom, Annick C. Weustink, Yoshinobu Onuma, Nico R. Mollet, Carl Schultz, Emanuele Meliga, Martin van der Ent, Giorgios Sianos, Dick Goedhart, Ad den Boer, Pim de Feyter, Patrick W. Serruys
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