Abstract

In the screening and identifying of colon and rectum malignancy, computed tomography colonography (CTC) is a highly effective imaging technique, albeit patients receiving a significant effective dose. Accordingly, patient dose evaluation is an important need, seeking to ensure benefits outweigh the projected cancer risk. Objective: For CTC procedures carried out in the Radiology Department, Medical Imaging Operation Services, King Fahad Medical City (KFMC), evaluation is done using the current American College of Radiology (ACR) imaging protocol and concomitant patient-effective doses. Study is carried out on a sample size of 55 CTC procedures, involving 25 males (45%) and 30 females (55%). The patients were classified as follows: two groups based on CT machine; four groups based on the applied protocol; and three groups based on the procedure results. All procedures were carried out using two machines, the products of two different vendors (a GE Healthcare DISCOVERY CT 750 HD 64 slices dual-energy scanner and a Philips Brilliance CT 64 slices scanner). The overall mean, standard deviation (SD), median, and range of the effective dose (in mSv) were 11.57 ± 7.75, 9.25 (2.17–31.93). Automatic tube current modulation (ATCM) shows a significant increase in CTDIvol up to 69% and effective dose (mSv) up to 95% than the manual tube current (mA) compared to the standard protocol. The CT protocol variation results in a three-fold variation in patient-effective dose. The technologist role is crucial in selecting a noise reference based on patient weight and adjusting tube current per slice to avoid overexposure during ATCM protocol.

Highlights

  • Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second most common cancer among Saudi adults (12.2%), being the most prevalent cancer among males, ranking third for females (10.4%) [1]

  • The mean ± standard deviation (SD), median, and range of

  • Patient dose during computed tomography colonography (CTC) has been assessed using two helical scanners, various imaging protocols, and CT machine settings

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Summary

Introduction

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second most common cancer among Saudi adults (12.2%), being the most prevalent cancer among males, ranking third for females (10.4%) [1]. One of the options available for average-risk cancer individuals is the low radiation dose computed tomography colonography (CTC) technique [9]. The American College of Radiology (ACR) has recommended that the adult relative radiation level (RRL) for CTC should not exceed 10 mSv per procedure while for an average weight patient of 70 to 90 kg. As a low radiation dose protocol (screening protocol) the exposure factors needs to be optimized and justified according to the patient situation [18,19]. A study shows that an optimized screening protocol can reduce the effective dose significantly compared to a general daily practice protocol, with a life-time cancer risk of 0.14% being estimated for a 50-year-old individual exposed to CTC radiation dose [20]. This study evaluates the current imaging protocol at King Fahad Medical City (KFMC) and radiation dose, following guidance of the American College of Radiology (ACR)

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