CT scan may give patients high radiation dose: study

Tue Feb 3, 2009 10:38pm GMT
 
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By Susan Kelly

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Patients are receiving the equivalent of 600 chest X-rays when they get CT scans for heart disease and not enough clinics are using known ways to reduce this exposure, researchers reported on Tuesday.

While the potential risk of developing cancer after a cardiac CT scan is slight, at less than 1 percent, researchers in the large, international study found the radiation doses from such tests varied widely among hospitals, suggesting more can be done to minimize patients' exposure.

"It does drive home the fact that, yes, those scanners do impart a radiation dose, and the doctors together with their patients really have to think about whether or not the scan is the best approach for the particular patient," study co-author Dr. Thomas Gerber of the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Florida, said in a telephone interview.

Gerber headed an American Heart Association panel that called on Monday for more careful selection of patients who receive diagnostic tests such as CT scans to minimize the doses of ionizing radiation.

So called "64-slice" CT scans, which take dozens of images in one rotation around the body, are an increasingly popular tool to diagnose coronary artery disease, particularly in patients with symptoms such as chest pain or shortness of breath.

But a number of recent studies have raised alarm about the potential cancer risks from the radiation.

Gerber, Dr. Jorg Hausleiter of the Technical University, Munich, Germany, and colleagues studied 1,965 patients who had cardiac CT scans between February and December 2007 at 50 university and community hospitals worldwide.

They found the median dose from a heart CT scan, as calculated by a measurement of absorbed radiation, differed significantly from hospital to hospital. The median radiation dose from all sites was equivalent to 600 chest X-rays, they reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association.  Continued...

 

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