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International variation in radiation dose for computed tomography examinations: prospective cohort study
232
Zitationen
20
Autoren
2019
Jahr
Abstract
Abstract Objective To determine patient, institution, and machine characteristics that contribute to variation in radiation doses used for computed tomography (CT). Design Prospective cohort study. Setting Data were assembled and analyzed from the University of California San Francisco CT International Dose Registry. Participants Standardized data from over 2.0 million CT examinations of adults who underwent CT between November 2015 and August 2017 from 151 institutions, across seven countries (Switzerland, Netherlands, Germany, United Kingdom, United States, Israel, and Japan). Main outcome measures Mean effective doses and proportions of high dose examinations for abdomen, chest, combined chest and abdomen, and head CT were determined by patient characteristics (sex, age, and size), type of institution (trauma center, care provision 24 hours per day and seven days per week, academic, private), institutional practice volume, machine factors (manufacturer, model), country, and how scanners were used, before and after adjustment for patient characteristics, using hierarchical linear and logistic regression. High dose examinations were defined as CT scans with doses above the 75th percentile defined during a baseline period. Results The mean effective dose and proportion of high dose examinations varied substantially across institutions. The doses varied modestly (10-30%) by type of institution and machine characteristics after adjusting for patient characteristics. By contrast, even after adjusting for patient characteristics, wide variations in radiation doses across countries persisted, with a fourfold range in mean effective dose for abdomen CT examinations (7.0-25.7 mSv) and a 17-fold range in proportion of high dose examinations (4-69%). Similar variation across countries was observed for chest (mean effective dose 1.7-6.4 mSv, proportion of high dose examinations 1-26%) and combined chest and abdomen CT (10.0-37.9 mSv, 2-78%). Doses for head CT varied less (1.4-1.9 mSv, 8-27%). In multivariable models, the dose variation across countries was primarily attributable to institutional decisions regarding technical parameters (that is, how the scanners were used). Conclusions CT protocols and radiation doses vary greatly across countries and are primarily attributable to local choices regarding technical parameters, rather than patient, institution, or machine characteristics. These findings suggest that the optimization of doses to a consistent standard should be possible. Study registration Clinicaltrials.gov NCT03000751 .
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Autoren
- Rebecca Smith‐Bindman
- Yifei Wang
- Philip Chu
- Robert Chung
- Andrew J. Einstein
- Jonathan N. Balcombe
- M Cocker
- Marcos Das
- Bradley N. Delman
- Michael Flynn
- Robert G. Gould
- Ryan K. Lee
- Thomas R. Nelson
- Sebastian T. Schindera
- Anthony Seibert
- Jay Starkey
- Saravanabavaan Suntharalingam
- Axel Wetter
- Joachim E. Wildberger
- Diana L. Miglioretti
Institutionen
- Lee University(US)
- University of California, San Francisco(US)
- University of California System(US)
- University of California, Berkeley(US)
- Columbia University Irving Medical Center(US)
- Assuta Medical Center(IL)
- Churchill Hospital(GB)
- University of Oxford(GB)
- Maastricht University(NL)
- Helios Kliniken(DE)
- Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai(US)
- Henry Ford Health System(US)
- Einstein Healthcare Network(US)
- University of California San Diego(US)
- Kantonsspital Aarau(CH)
- University of California Davis Medical Center(US)
- St. Luke's International Hospital(JP)
- Essen University Hospital(DE)
- Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute(US)
- University of California, Davis(US)