Abstract

Once reserved solely for non-surgical cases, percutaneous ablation is becoming an increasingly popular treatment option for a wider array of patients with small renal masses and the radiation risk needs to be better defined as this transition continues. Retrospective review of our renal tumor ablation database revealed 425 patients who underwent percutaneous ablation for treatment of 455 renal tumors over a 5-year time period. Imparted radiation dose information was reviewed for each procedure and converted to effective patient dose and skin dose using established techniques. Statistical analysis was performed with each ablative technique. For the 331 cryoablation procedures, the mean DLP was 6987mGycm (SD=2861) resulting in a mean effective dose of 104.7mSv (SD=43.5) and the mean CTDIvol was 558mGy (SD=439) resulting in a mean skin dose of 563.2mGy (SD=344.1). For the 124 RFA procedures, the mean DLP was 3485mGycm (SD=1630) resulting in a mean effective dose of 50.3mSv (SD=24.0) and the mean CTDIvol was 232mGy (SD=149) resulting in a mean skin dose of 233.2mGy (SD=117.4). The difference in patient radiation exposure between the two renal ablation techniques was statistically significant (p<0.001). Both cryoablation and RFA imparted an average skin dose that was well below the 2Gy deterministic threshold for appreciable sequela. Renal tumor cryoablation resulted in a mean skin and effective radiation dose more than twice that for RFA. The radiation exposure for both renal tumor ablation techniques was at the high end of the medical imaging radiation dose spectrum.

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