| Literature DB >> 22792457 |
Mark S Pearce1, Jane A Salotti, Nicola L Howe, Kieran McHugh, Kwang Pyo Kim, Choonsik Lee, Alan W Craft, Amy Berrington de Gonzaléz, Louise Parker.
Abstract
Background. Although using computed tomography (CT) can be greatly beneficial, the associated relatively high radiation doses have led to growing concerns in relation to potential associations with risk of future cancer. Very little has been published regarding the trends of CT use in young people. Therefore, our objective was to assess temporal and other patterns in CT usage among patients aged under 22 years in Great Britain from 1993 to 2002. Methods. Electronic data were obtained from the Radiology Information Systems of 81 hospital trusts within Great Britain. All included patients were aged under 22 years and examined using CT between 1993 and 2002, with accessible radiology records. Results. The number of CT examinations doubled over the study period. While increases in numbers of recorded examinations were seen across all age groups, the greatest increases were in the older patients, most notably those aged 15-19 years of age. Sixty percent of CT examinations were of the head, with the percentages varying with calendar year and patient age. Conclusions. In contrast to previous data from the North of England, the doubling of CT use was not accompanied by an increase in numbers of multiple examinations to the same individual.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22792457 PMCID: PMC3390133 DOI: 10.1155/2012/594278
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiol Res Pract ISSN: 2090-195X
Figure 1Number of examinations and number of patients per year in male and female patients under 22 years of age in Great Britain, 1993–2002.
Figure 2Number of examinations per year in patients under 22 years of age in Great Britain, 1993–2002, by age group (age intervals differ in size).
Numbers of CT examinations by sex and type of examination in patients under 22 years of age in Great Britain, 1993–2002.
| Categories | All | Males | Females |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Head and neck | 218,091 (60) | 125,295 (60) | 92,424 (60) |
| Abdomen and pelvis | 42,226 (12) | 24,020 (12) | 18,169 (12) |
| Chest | 31,074 (9) | 17,853 (9) | 13,200 (9) |
| Unknown | 24,039 (7) | 13,668 (7) | 10,367 (7) |
| Extremities | 17,853 (5) | 10,559 (5) | 7,285 (4) |
| Spine | 10,513 (3) | 6,493 (3) | 3,999 (3) |
| Miscellaneous | 17,763 (5) | 9,396 (4) | 8,357 (5) |
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| Total | 361,559 (100) | 207,284 (100) | 153,801 (100) |
Sex not known for 474 examinations (372 “head,” 37 “abdomen,” 21 each for “chest” and “spine,” 9 “extremities,” 4 “unknown,” and 10 “miscellaneous”).
Figure 3Number of head and neck CT examinations per year in patients under 22 years of age in Great Britain, 1993–2002 (age intervals differ in size).
Numbers of CT examinations by age and type of examination in patients under 22 years of age in Great Britain, 1993–2002.
| Age at time of examination (years) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Categories | <1 | 1–4 | 5–9 | 10–14 | 15–19 | 20-21 |
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| Head & neck | 15,921 (73) | 40,056 (61) | 34,117 (61) | 41,539 (59) | 53,191 (59) | 33,128 (57) |
| Abdomen & pelvis | 1,156 (5) | 6,260 (10) | 5,080 (9) | 6,979 (10) | 12,491 (14) | 10,230 (18) |
| Chest | 1,739 (8) | 5,430 (8) | 5,052 (9) | 5,823 (8) | 8,019 (9) | 4,995 (9) |
| Unknown | 1,773 (9) | 8,429 (13) | 4,916 (9) | 4,071 (6) | 3,292 (4) | 1,551 (3) |
| Extremity | 471 (2) | 1,679 (3) | 2,352 (4) | 5,646 (8) | 5,212 (6) | 2,485 (4) |
| Miscellaneous | 637 (3) | 2,925 (5) | 3,253 (6) | 4,236 (6) | 3,880 (4) | 2,815 (5) |
| Spine | 120 (1) | 758 (1) | 1,159 (2) | 2,047 (3) | 3,931 (4) | 2,494 (4) |
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| Total |
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Age not known for 221 examinations (139 “Head”, 34 “Abdomen”, 20 “Chest”, 11 “Miscellaneous”, 8 “Extremities”, 5 “Unknown” and 4 “Spine”).
Numbers of multiple examinations per patient, by sex.
| No. of examinations | Total patients | Males | Females |
|---|---|---|---|
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| 1 | 132,962 (71) | 75,658 (70) | 59,061 (72) |
| 2 | 34,419 (18) | 19,682 (19) | 14,691 (18) |
| 3 | 8,837 (5) | 5,308 (5) | 3,511 (4) |
| 4 | 4,822 (3) | 2,888 (3) | 1,923 (2) |
| 5 | 2,113 (1) | 1,260 (1) | 849 (1) |
| 6 | 1,362 (0.7) | 811 (0.8) | 549 (0.7) |
| 7 | 764 (0.4) | 474 (0.5) | 287 (0.4) |
| 8 | 614 (0.3) | 380 (0.4) | 232 (0.3) |
| 9 | 374 (0.2) | 217 (0.2) | 157 (0.2) |
| 10 | 294 (0.2) | 176 (0.2) | 118 (0.1) |
| 11–20 | 928 (0.5) | 554 (0.5) | 372 (0.5) |
| >20 | 149 (0.1) | 88 (0.1) | 61 (0.1) |
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| Total | 187,638 (100) | 105,496 (100) | 81,811 (100) |
331 patients were of unknown sex (243 had one examination, 46 had two examinations, 18 had three examinations, 11 had four examinations, and no patients of unknown sex had over 20 examinations).