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Clinical Decision Making in CT: Risk Assessment Comparison Across 12 Risk Metrics in Patient Populations

dc.contributor.author Ria, Francesco
dc.contributor.author Fu, Wanyi
dc.contributor.author Hoye, Jocelyn
dc.contributor.author Segars, William
dc.contributor.author Kapadia, Anuj
dc.contributor.author Samei, Ehsan
dc.date.accessioned 2020-12-17T19:15:19Z
dc.date.available 2020-12-17T19:15:19Z
dc.date.issued 2020-06-30
dc.identifier.issn 0971-6203
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21911
dc.description.abstract Purpose The Medical Physics 3.0 initiative aims to enhance direct physicist involvement in clinical decision making to improve patient care. In this involvement, it is crucial to achieve effective and patient-specific radiation risk assessment. CT risk characterization presents a variety of metrics, many of which used as radiation risk surrogates; some are related to the device output (CTDI), whereas others include patient organ risk-, age-, and gender-factors (Effective Dose, Risk Index). It is unclear how different metrics can accurately reflect the radiological risk. This study compared how twelve metrics characterize risk across CT patient populations to inform effective clinical decision making in radiology. Methods This IRB-approved study included 1394 adult CT examinations (abdominopelvic and chest). Organ doses were calculated using Monte Carlo methods. The following risk surrogate metrics were calculated: CTDIvol, DLP, SSDE, DLP-based Effective Dose (EDk), organ-dose-based ED (EDOD), dose to defining organ (stomach- and lungs-ODD), organ-dose-based Risk Index (RI), and 20 y.o. patient Risk Index (RIr). Furthermore, ODD,0, ED0, and RI0 were calculated for a reference patient (ICRP 110). Lastly, an adjusted ED (ED') was computed as the product of RI/RIr and EDOD. A linear regression was applied to assess each metric’s dependency to RI, assumed to be the closest patient risk surrogate. The normalized-slope (nS) and a Minimum Risk Detectability Index (MRDI=RMSE/slope) were calculated for each fit. Results The analysis reported significant differences between the metrics. ED’ showed the best concordance with RI in terms of nS and MRDI. Across all metrics and protocols, nS ranged between 0.37(SSDE) to 1.29(RI0); MRDI ranged between 39.11(EDk) to 1.10(ED’) cancers per 105 patients per 0.1Gy. Conclusion Radiation risk characterization in CT populations is strongly affected by the index used to describe it. When involved in clinical decisions, medical physicists should exercise care in ascribing an implicit risk to factors that do not closely reflect risk.
dc.publisher Medknow Publications
dc.relation.ispartof Journal of Medical Physics
dc.relation.isversionof 10.1002/mp.14316
dc.title Clinical Decision Making in CT: Risk Assessment Comparison Across 12 Risk Metrics in Patient Populations
dc.type Conference
duke.contributor.id Segars, William|0287434
duke.contributor.id Kapadia, Anuj|0295298
duke.contributor.id Samei, Ehsan|0261465
dc.date.updated 2020-12-17T19:15:18Z
pubs.begin-page e519
pubs.end-page e519
pubs.issue 47
pubs.organisational-group Staff
pubs.organisational-group Duke
pubs.publication-status Published
pubs.volume 6
duke.contributor.orcid Samei, Ehsan|0000-0001-7451-3309


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