电离辐射人体照射残疾权重的定义及其在医疗照射中的应用。

BJR open Pub Date : 2024-12-18 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/bjro/tzae043
Colin John Kotre
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:建立辐射剂量学与残疾调整生命年(DALY)之间的联系,以量化医疗照射的合理性。方法:计算美国-欧洲人群的健康损害,定义为暴露于电离辐射年龄的DALY终生损失。这种关系的一个简单模型与结果相吻合。除了在晚年辐射诱发癌症的潜伏期内,大部分关系可以充分拟合为负梯度的直线。这条线的梯度对应于受辐射照射后每年的DALY损失,因此相当于用于计算DALY的残疾权重(DW)。结果:美国-欧洲人群辐射暴露的辐射剂量依赖性DWs估计为男性0.020 DALY/年/西沃特,女性0.022 DALY/年/西沃特。结论:通过比较66项关于疾病或损伤状态的dw与相关放射暴露导致的dw的放射检查,图表显示,在每种情况下,由此产生的益处远大于危害。知识的进步:电离辐射的DW定义与目前定义的有效剂量成正比,可以将辐射照射与现有大量关于DALY负担的数据和各种疾病和伤害的DW联系起来,为医疗照射的损益平衡提供定量证明的手段。
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Definition of a disability weight for human exposure to ionizing radiation and its application to the justification of medical exposure.

Objectives: To establish a link between radiation dosimetry and disability-adjusted life-years (DALY) with the aim of quantifying the justification of medical exposures.

Methods: The health detriment, defined as lifetime loss of DALY at age of exposure to ionizing radiation for a US-European population was calculated. A simple model of the relationship was fitted to the results. Apart from in late life within the latency period for radiation-induced cancers, most of the relationship can be adequately fitted to a straight line of negative gradient. The gradient of this line corresponds to a loss of DALY per year following exposure to radiation and is therefore equivalent to a disability weight (DW) used in the calculation of DALY.

Results: Radiation dose-dependent DWs for radiation exposure to a US-European population are estimated as 0.020 DALY/yr/Sv for males and 0.022 DALY/yr/Sv for females.

Conclusions: By comparing a range of 66 radiological examinations in terms of the DWs of the disease or injury states with the DWs resulting from the associated radiological exposures, it is demonstrated graphically that the resulting benefit is far greater than the detriment in every case.

Advances in knowledge: The definition of a DW for ionizing radiation, proportional to effective dose as currently defined, can link radiation exposure to the existing large body of data on the DALY burden and DWs for a wide range of diseases and injuries, providing a means for the quantitative justification of the benefit-detriment balance of medical exposures.

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