| Literature DB >> 31773069 |
Sarah Kim1, Lienard Chang1,2, Elizabeth Mosher1, Choonik Lee3, Choonsik Lee1.
Abstract
In the epidemiological study on the health effects of participants in the United States Radiologic Technologists (USRT) study, organ dosimetry was performed based on surveys and literature reviews. To convert dosimeter readings to organ doses, organ dose coefficients were adopted. However, the existing dose coefficients were derived from computational human phantoms with ICRP reference height and weight not accounting for the variation in body size. We first calculated preliminary body size-dependent organ dose coefficients using selected body size-dependent phantoms combined with Monte Carlo radiation transport method. We then tested the accuracy of these body-size dependent coefficients against the ICRP 74 reference size coefficients in comparison with five individual-specific organ dose coefficients computed from computed tomography (CT) image-based anatomical models of five adult males with different body sizes also using Monte Carlo methods. The reference size dose coefficients overall underestimate the patient-specific dose coefficients by up to 51%. Body size-dependent phantoms overall provided more accurate organ dose coefficients for the five patients. In case of the esophagus, the dose underestimation of 51% in the comparison with the reference phantom was reduced to 7%. The results confirm that potential dosimetric misclassification caused by using reference size phantom-based dose coefficients can be resolved by using the body size-dependent dose coefficients.Entities:
Keywords: body size; computational human phantoms; dose reconstruction; epidemiology; organ dose coefficients
Year: 2018 PMID: 31773069 PMCID: PMC6879178 DOI: 10.1109/TRPMS.2018.2847227
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IEEE Trans Radiat Plasma Med Sci ISSN: 2469-7303