Abstract
The appearance of a malignant disease during pregnancy is relatively rare. The use of external-beam radiation therapy is limited to non-pelvic tumors which are usually located above the diaphragm. However, supradiaphragmatic radiotherapy unavoidably exposes the fetus to secondary radiation due to head leakage, scatter from the machine and scatter produced inside the patient. This fetal exposure may be associated with an elevated risk for the development of deterministic harmful effects and/or carcinogenesis. The decision about the administration of radiotherapy in a pregnant patient is influenced by the fetal dose which must always be estimated before the patient’s treatment course. The methods employed for fetal dosimetry in external-beam radiotherapy are described in this review study. Direct dose measurements using thermoluminescent dosemeters or large ionization chambers placed on physical phantoms may be used. Monte Carlo simulations on computational phantoms may also provide accurate fetal dose calculations. The physical and/or computational phantoms need to simulate the full-scatter geometry of the pregnant patient. Typical fetal dose values attributable to radiation therapy for brain tumors, head and neck cancer, breast carcinoma and Hodgkin lymphoma at the first, second and third trimesters of gestation are presented. The effectiveness of different shielding devices for fetal dose reduction in radiotherapy is discussed. The effect of the dimensions and setup of the shielding material on the radiation dose received by the fetus is described. Moreover, practical methods for reducing the fetal dose by selecting the appropriate irradiation parameters are presented.
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