Pediatric radiation dosimetry for positron-emitting radionuclides using anthropomorphic phantoms

Tianwu Xie, Wesley E. Bolch, Choonsik Lee, Habib Zaidi*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    23 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Purpose: Positron emission tomography (PET) plays an important role in the diagnosis, staging, treatment, and surveillance of clinically localized diseases. Combined PET/CT imaging exhibits significantly higher sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy than conventional imaging when it comes to detecting malignant tumors in children. However, the radiation dose from positron-emitting radionuclide to the pediatric population is a matter of concern since children are at a particularly high risk when exposed to ionizing radiation.

    Methods: The authors evaluate the absorbed fractions and specific absorbed fractions (SAFs) of monoenergy photons/electrons as well as S-values of 9 positron-emitting radionuclides (C-11, N-13, O-15, F-18, Cu-64, Ga-68, Rb-82, Y-86, and I-124) in 48 source regions for 10 anthropomorphic pediatric hybrid models, including the reference newborn, 1-, 5-, 10-, and 15-yr-old male and female models, using the Monte Carlo N-Particle eXtended general purpose Monte Carlo transport code.

    Results: The self-absorbed SAFs and S-values for most organs were inversely related to the age and body weight, whereas the cross-dose terms presented less correlation with body weight. For most source/target organ pairs, Rb-82 and Y-86 produce the highest self-absorbed and cross-absorbed S-values, respectively, while Cu-64 produces the lowest S-values because of the low-energy and high-frequency of electron emissions. Most of the total self-absorbed S-values are contributed from non-penetrating particles (electrons and positrons), which have a linear relationship with body weight. The dependence of self-absorbed S-values of the two annihilation photons varies to the reciprocal of 0.76 power of the mass, whereas the self-absorbed S-values of positrons vary according to the reciprocal mass.

    Conclusions: The produced S-values for common positron-emitting radionuclides can be exploited for the assessment of radiation dose delivered to the pediatric population from various PET radiotracers used in clinical and research settings. The mass scaling method for positron-emitters can be used to derive patient-specific S-values from data of reference phantoms. (C) 2013 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number102502
    Number of pages14
    JournalMedical Physics
    Volume40
    Issue number10
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Oct-2013

    Keywords

    • radiation dosimetry
    • PET
    • Monte Carlo
    • computational models
    • pediatrics
    • INTERNAL DOSE ASSESSMENT
    • PERSONAL-COMPUTER SOFTWARE
    • NUCLEAR-MEDICINE
    • COMPUTATIONAL PHANTOMS
    • S-VALUES
    • NEWBORN PATIENT
    • VOXEL PHANTOMS
    • CAMERA IMAGES
    • HUMAN ANATOMY
    • UF SERIES

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