CT pulmonary angiography in pregnancy: Specific conversion factors to estimate effective radiation dose from dose length product: A retrospective cross-sectional study across a multi-hospital integrated healthcare network
Autor: | Chinara Feizullayeva, John Austin McCandlish, William O'Connell, Paul P. Cronin, Stuart L. Cohen, Jason J. Wang, Nicholas Chan, Matthew A. Barish, Pina C. Sanelli |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Adult
medicine.medical_specialty Cross-sectional study Dose Length Product Radiation Dosage Effective dose (radiation) Pregnancy medicine Humans Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging Retrospective Studies Ct pulmonary angiography Delivery of Health Care Integrated business.industry Radiation dose Angiography Monitoring system General Medicine medicine.disease Hospitals Cross-Sectional Studies Female Radiology Pulmonary Embolism Tomography X-Ray Computed business Cancer risk |
Zdroj: | European Journal of Radiology. 143:109908 |
ISSN: | 0720-048X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ejrad.2021.109908 |
Popis: | PURPOSE Effective dose describes radiation-related cancer risk from CT scans and is estimated using a readily available conversion factor (k-factor), which varies by body part and study type. To purpose of this study is to determine the specific k-factor for CTPA in pregnant patients and its predictive factors. METHODS This retrospective cross-sectional study evaluates CTPA in pregnancy across a multihospital integrated healthcare network from January 2012 to April 2017. Patient and CTPA-related data were obtained from the electronic health record and a radiation dose index monitoring system. Each patient's effective dose was determined by patient-specific Monte-Carlo simulation with Cristy phantoms and divided by patient dose-length-product to determine the k-factor. K-factor for pregnant patients was compared to the k-factor for adults of standard physique with a one-sample t-test. Bivariate and multivariable analyses were performed for patient and CT predictors of k-factor. RESULTS A total of 534 patients were included. The mean k-factor for all patients was 0.0249 (mSv·mGy-1·cm-1), 78% greater than k-factor of 0.014 (p |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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