articleRadiologySep 1, 2004Closed access

Estimated Radiation Risks Potentially Associated with Full-Body CT Screening

Columbia University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Materials And Methods

The estimated dose to the lung or stomach from a single full-body CT examination is 14-21 mGy, which corresponds to a dose region for which there is direct evidence of increased cancer mortality in atomic bomb survivors. Total doses for repeated examinations are correspondingly higher. The authors used estimated cancer risks in a U.S. population derived from atomic bomb-associated cancer mortality data, together with calculated organ doses from a full-body CT examination, to estimate the radiation risks associated with single and multiple full-body CT examinations.

Results

A single full-body CT examination in a 45-year-old adult would result in an estimated lifetime attributable cancer mortality risk of around 0.08%, with the 95% credibility limits being a factor of 3.2 in either direction. A 45-year-old adult who plans to undergo annual full-body CT examinations up to age 75 (30 examinations) would accrue an overall estimated lifetime attributable risk of cancer mortality of about 1.9%, with the 95% credibility limits being a factor of 2 in either direction.

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687
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Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Attributable risk
  • Lung cancer
  • Population
  • Cancer
  • Nuclear medicine
  • Risk factor
  • Relative risk
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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