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Assessment of Effective Dose in Computed Tomography using an Anthropomorphic Phantom Paul Collins Supervised by Brendan Tuohy 5th September 2005 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Overview • Motivation and Objectives • Methodology • Organ Location in Phantom and Measurement • Patient ‘Effective Dose’ Calculation • Results • Conclusions 5th September 2005 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Motivation Investigate the rise of patient dose in CT • Indications are that patient dose is rising in CT • Due to evolution of CT technology and subsequent changes in practise • Conventional CT has now evolved to Multi-Slice CT (MSCT) which has to potential to vastly increase dose Objectives • Evaluate changes in patient dose due to advancement of MSCT scanners 5th September 2005 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry What is MSCT Siemens, 2004 SSCT MSCT (Single Slice CT) (Multi-Slice CT) •Evolved from development of the Detector Array •64 Slice CT :1 rotation = up to 64 Slice acquisition 5th September 2005 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Why MSCT • Benefits • Disadvantages – Near Isotropic – Fast Imaging – Increase Data • .33sec Rotation Times – High Quality Images – Thinner Slices – Large Volume Acquisition • Staff Workload • Data Storage – Increase in Patient Dose • Technology Changes • Changes in practise 0.6mm Slice thickness 6sec scan time Siemens 64 Slice Scanner, 2004 5th September 2005 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Why Patient Dose is increasing • Technology Changes – Extra volume scanned – Extra helical rotations – Interpolation for axial reconstruction – Z-axis over beaming •Protocol Changes –May be tendency to image more volume –Thinner Slices –Higher quality – Penumbra region not utilised by detectors 5th September 2005 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Why slices thickness affects patient dose? – Image noise is random fluctuations of pixels values – Finite number of x-ray photons are transmitted (i.e. in a slice) – Thinner slices Less x-ray photons larger variation in pixel values more noise – mA then has to be increased to provide useful diagnostic images – linear relationship between mA and patient dose 5th September 2005 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Evaluation of patient dose 1. Randoman aka ‘Séamus’ – Tissue Equivalent Humanoid Phantom – Verified for measurement of absorbed dose in CT – 35 axial slices – Plugs to hold TLDs 2. Diagnostic TLDs – Measure Absorbed dose to Organs – ~45 TLD were placed at specific organ locations for each protocol – Organ selection and patient dose calculation guided by ICRP publication 60 (International Commission on Radiation Protection) 5th September 2005 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Organ Location • TLDs needed to be placed accurately within phantom to measure organ dose • Methodology – Whole Body CT of Phantom – Calibrated Image using ImageJ software tool • Any point to point distance know – Labelled Vertebral Column • Could now relate each slice of phantom to specific vertebra – Human Slice Server used to locate organs according to vertebral column 5th September 2005 Human Slice Server Sagittal view Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Whole Body Phantom CT Organ Location • Human Slice Server –virtual reconstruction of human anatomy in any orientation or location –3D datasets from a human body Human Slice Image ( T-11 ) •frozen & digitised into 1 mm slices –Labelled images of organs/tissues/vertebrae etc. –Organs were then located in phantom using the vertebrae as a guide 5th September 2005 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Slice 22 of phantom Human Slice Server Screen Capture 5th September 2005 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Organ Selection • Organs selected to allow for effective dose measurement – ICRP 60 Measured Organs/Tissues Gonads Bone Marrow (Red) Colon • Organs were located using previous method • At least two TLDs placed within each organ e.g. – #2 TLDs in gonads – #6 TLDs in lung Lung Stomach Bladder Liver Oesophagus Thyroid Skin Bone Surface Brain Kidney Eye Lens 5th September 2005 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Effective Dose • Effective Dose Calculation – Sum of weighted equivalent doses in tissues and organs E wT H T T E: Effective Dose (Sievert) WT: Tissue weighting Factor HT : Equivalent Dose (Sievert) T: Tissue/Organ HT = Absorbed Dose x Radiation Factor Tissue or organ Gonads 0.2 Bone Marrow (Red) 0.12 Colon 0.12 Lung 0.12 Stomach 0.12 Bladder 0.05 Breast 0.05 Liver 0.05 Oesophagus 0.05 Thyroid 0.05 Skin 0.01 Bone Surface 0.01 Remainder 0.05 The remainder is composed of the following tissues and organs: adrenal, brain, upper large intestine, small intestine, kidney, muscle, pancreas, spleen, thymus and uterus. Radiation factor for photons 1 5th September 2005 Tissue Weighting Factor wT Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Protocols • Standard Imaging Protocols – – – – Abdomen/Pelvis Head Chest RT protocols (Radiotherapy) 5th September 2005 • CT Scanners – Philips ACQSim (RT scanner) – Siemens Sensation Emotion Duo – Siemens Sensation Emotion 6 – Philips Brilliance 16 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Abdomen/Pelvis Protocol kV Effective mAs Slice thickness (mm) Scan time No. of slices Scan length (mm) Pitch Collimation Tube Rotation (s) 2 Slice 6 Slice 16 Slice 130 63 8 17.09 51 408 2.5 2x4mm .8 130 95 5 17.35 82 410 1.25 6x2mm .6 120 200 5 11.61 81 405 1.2 16x1.5mm .75 Effective mAs Effective mAs = mAs/pitch 5th September 2005 Slice thickness Scan Time Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Organ Absorbed Dose • Increases in average dose to organs located in primary radiation beam • Highest absorbed doses to – Skin – Bone Marrow – Colon – Gonads – Oesophagus 5th September 2005 2 Slice Tissue or organ Absorbed Dose [mGy] Gonads Bone Marrow (Red) Colon Lung Stomach Bladder Liver Oesophagus Thyroid Skin Bone Surface Brain Kidneys Eye Lens -Left -Right Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry 8.27 6.22 7.66 4.93 5.67 4.91 6.69 3.31 0.15 7.89 6.22 0.02 5.45 0.04 0.04 6 Slice 16 Slice Absorbed Absorbed Dose Dose [mGy] [mGy] 11.08 11.52 12.26 1.21 8.98 8.47 8.96 7.97 0.07 12.69 11.52 0.01 11.52 0.06 0.05 13.02 15.49 14.65 3.97 12.38 10.82 10.55 11.42 0.39 15.39 15.49 0.06 16.95 0.07 0.06 Abdomen/Pelvis Protocol Effective Dose [mSv] Effective Dose 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 2 Slice 6 Slice 16 Slice Scanner Slice Acquisition Effective Dose [mSv] % Increase Relative to 2 Slice 5th September 2005 2 Slice 5.20 0.00 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry 6 Slice 7.97 53.47 16 Slice 10.40 100.09 Other Protocols Head Protocol 2 Slice 1.6131 Effective Dose [mSv] 16 Slice 2.7091 • Axial imaging • Skin dose – 32.80mGy • mAs 260mAs to 350mAs • Brain dose – 30.52mGy Radiotherapy Protocols Effective Dose [mSv] • Axial imaging 5th September 2005 Head Protocol 1.7093 Chest Protocol 6.2943 Abdomen Protocol 5.9474 • 3mm Slices Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Radiation Risks • Risks from Effective dose (ICRP 60) • 1 mSv equates to a cancer risk of 1 in 20000 Effective Dose [mSv] % Increase Relative to 2 Slice 2 Slice 5.20 0.00 6 Slice 7.97 53.47 Abdomen/Pelvis Protocol • 1 in 4000 risk for 5mSv • 1 in 2500 risk for 8mSv • 1 in 2000 risk for 10mSv 5th September 2005 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry 16 Slice 10.40 100.09 Conclusions • Dose is increasing • 64 slice scanner UCHG – 0.33sec rotation 0.6mm slice thickness • Effective dose of 64 Slice scanner? 5th September 2005 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Conclusions Image Quality Patient Dose • Patient dose generally increases with better image quality • Diagnosis is the goal of CT • Is patient diagnosis improving with increasing patient dose? • Does greater image quality result in better diagnosis? •ALARA principle –Does diagnosis improve from 2 Slice to 6 Slice to 16 Slice? 5th September 2005 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry Questions? Toshiba 256 detector 4D-CT scanner 5th September 2005 Paul Collins Computed Tomography Dosimetry