Effective dose: how should it be applied to medical exposures?
Top Cited Papers
- 1 August 2007
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The British Journal of Radiology
- Vol. 80 (956) , 639-647
- https://doi.org/10.1259/bjr/25922439
Abstract
The effective dose (E) was created to provide a dose quantity that was related to the probability of health detriment due to stochastic effects from exposure to low doses of ionizing radiation. E is derived from the weighted sum of doses to tissues that are known to be sensitive to radiation and so can only be derived by calculation. The tissue weighting factors are derived from the extrapolation of epidemiological evidence. E was intended for use in radiation protection, but has found wide application in evaluation of doses for medical exposures involving only parts of the body. More reliance is often placed on E values and risk estimates based on E than the evidence on which it is based can justify. In this paper, the uncertainties in the estimated values of E for a reference patient and the associated risk coefficients are reviewed in order to provide an indication of how much reliance can be placed on E as an indicator of risk for patients. The relative uncertainty in estimated values of E for medical exposures for a reference patient is seen to be about +/-40%. The estimated risk of cancer may be a factor of three higher or lower when applied to a reference patient, and will be more variable when applied to an individual. A set of recommendations relating to the use of E and description of risk for medical exposures is proposed.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Normal Organ Radiation Dosimetry and Associated Uncertainties in Nuclear Medicine, with Emphasis on Iodine-131Radiation Research, 2006
- What are the risks from medical X-rays and other low dose radiation?The British Journal of Radiology, 2006
- A review of factors affecting patient doses for barium enemas and mealsThe British Journal of Radiology, 2004
- Cancer risks attributable to low doses of ionizing radiation: Assessing what we really knowProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2003
- Organ dose conversion coefficients for external photon irradiation of male and female voxel modelsPhysics in Medicine & Biology, 2002
- Probabilistic Accident Consequence Uncertainty Analysis of the Late Health Effects Module in the COSYMA PackageRadiation Protection Dosimetry, 2000
- Organ Dose Calculation in Medical X Ray Examinations by the Program PCXMCRadiation Protection Dosimetry, 1998
- The concept of the effective dose a proposal for the combination of organ dosesRadiation and Environmental Biophysics, 1975