Impact of shield location on staff and caregiver dose rates for I-131 radiopharmaceutical therapy patients.
Michael B BellamyB ChuB SerencsitsB QuinnJ AltamiranoD MiodownikM WilliamsonN AbrahamsF ChenD BiermanLukas Michael CarterM WutkowskiK PrasadLawrence Thomas DauerPublished in: Journal of radiological protection : official journal of the Society for Radiological Protection (2023)
The goal of this study is to investigate the effect of the location and width of a single lead shield on the dose rate of staff and caregivers in a hospital room with an I-131 patient. The best orientation of the patient and caregiver relative to the shield was determined based on minimizing staff and caregiver radiation dose rates. Shielded and unshielded dose rates were simulated using a Monte Carlo computer simulation and validated using real-world ionization chamber measurements. Based on a radiation transport analysis using an adult voxel phantom published by the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP), placing the shield near the caregiver yielded the lowest dose rates. However, this strategy reduced the dose rate in only a tiny area of the room. Furthermore, positioning the shield near the patient in the caudal direction provided a modest dose rate reduction while shielding a large room area. Finally, increased shield width was associated with decreasing dose rates, but only a four-fold dose-rate reduction was observed for standard width shields. The recommendations of this case study may be considered as potential candidate room configurations where radiation dose rates are minimized, however these findings must be weighed against additional clinical, safety, and comfort considerations.
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