4.6 Article

Organ dose conversion coefficients in CT scans for Korean adult males and females

Journal

NUCLEAR ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 54, Issue 2, Pages 681-688

Publisher

KOREAN NUCLEAR SOC
DOI: 10.1016/j.net.2021.08.008

Keywords

Computed tomography; Korean voxel phantoms; Radiation dose; Monte Carlo radiation transport

Funding

  1. intramural research program of the National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics

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The study established an organ dose conversion coefficient library for Korean adults, calculated using simulation techniques based on four Korean adult male and two female voxel phantoms. The calculated coefficients were compared with existing data from Caucasian phantoms. Representative organ doses for Korean adults were derived from Korean CT dose surveys and conversion coefficients. The Korean-specific coefficients showed slightly higher values compared to the ICRP reference phantoms.
Dose monitoring in CT patients requires accurate dose estimation but most of the CT dose calculation tools are based on Caucasian computational phantoms. We established a library of organ dose conversion coefficients for Korean adults by using four Korean adult male and two female voxel phantoms combined with Monte Carlo simulation techniques. We calculated organ dose conversion coefficients for head, chest, abdomen and pelvis, and chest-abdomen-pelvis scans, and compared the results with the existing data calculated from Caucasian phantoms. We derived representative organ doses for Korean adults using Korean CT dose surveys combined with the dose conversion coefficients. The organ dose conversion coefficients from the Korean adult phantoms were slightly greater than those of the ICRP reference phantoms: up to 13% for the brain doses in head scans and up to 10% for the dose to the small intestine wall in abdominal scans. We derived Korean representative doses to major organs in head, chest, and AP scans using mean CTDIvol values extracted from the Korean nationwide surveys conducted in 2008 and 2017. The Korean-specific organ dose conversion coefficients should be useful to readily estimate organ absorbed doses for Korean adult male and female patients undergoing CT scans. (c) 2021 Korean Nuclear Society, Published by Elsevier Korea LLC. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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