| Literature DB >> 32668420 |
Richard W Harbron1,2,3,4,5, Isabelle Thierry-Chef1,2,3, Mark S Pearce4, Marie-Odile Bernier6, Serge Dreuil6, Estelle Rage6, Maria Grazia Andreassi7, Eugenio Picano7, Steffen Dreger8, Hajo Zeeb8,9, Hilde Olerud10, Utheya Thevathas10, Kristina Kjaerheim11, Gaute Døhlen12, Andreas Jahnen13, Johannes Hermen13, Vadim Chumak14, Elena Bakhanova14, Vitalii Voloskyi14, David Borrego15, Choonsik Lee15, Jérémie Dabin16.
Abstract
The HARMONIC project (Health Effects of Cardiac Fluoroscopy and Modern Radiotherapy in Paediatrics) is a European study aiming to improve our understanding of the long-term health risks from radiation exposures in childhood and early adulthood. Here, we present the study design for the cardiac fluoroscopy component of HARMONIC. A pooled cohort of approximately 100 000 patients who underwent cardiac fluoroscopy procedures in Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Norway, Spain or the UK, while aged under 22 years, will be established from hospital records and/or insurance claims data. Doses to individual organs will be estimated from dose indicators recorded at the time of examination, using a lookup-table-based dosimetry system produced using Monte Carlo radiation transport simulations and anatomically realistic computational phantom models. Information on beam geometry and x-ray energy spectra will be obtained from a representative sample of radiation dose structured reports. Uncertainties in dose estimates will be modelled using 2D Monte Carlo methods. The cohort will be followed up using national registries and insurance records to determine vital status and cancer incidence. Information on organ transplantation (a major risk factor for cancer development in this patient group) and/or other conditions predisposing to cancer will be obtained from national or local registries and health insurance data, depending on country. The relationship between estimated radiation dose and cancer risk will be investigated using regression modelling. Results will improve information for patients and parents and aid clinicians in managing and implementing changes to reduce radiation risks without compromising medical benefits. Creative Commons Attribution license.Entities:
Keywords: Monte Carlo; cancer risks; cardiac fluoroscopy; epidemiology
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32668420 DOI: 10.1088/1361-6498/aba66d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Radiol Prot ISSN: 0952-4746 Impact factor: 1.394