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SUBSTANTIAL EXTERNAL DOSE RATE VARIABILITY OBSERVED IN A COHORT OF LU-177 PATIENTS INDEPENDENT OF BMI AND SEX.

Michael B BellamyBae ChuBrian SerencsitsBrian M QuinnK PrasadJ AltamiranoMatthew WilliamsonDaniel MiodownikNatalie AbrahamsFanny ChenDavid BiermanM WutkowskiLawrence Dauer
Published in: Radiation protection dosimetry (2022)
External dose rates were measured 1 m away from 230 Lu-177 patients to characterise the variability in normalised dose rates as a function of administered activity, body mass index (BMI) and sex. The largest dose rate observed was 0.07 mSv/h associated with an administered activity of 7.2 GBq. Substantial variability was found in the distribution of the normalised dose rate associated that had an average of 0.0037 mSv/h per GBq and a 95% confidence interval of 0.0024-0.0058 mSv/h per GBq. Based on this study, estimating the patient dose rate based on the Lu-177 gamma exposure factor overestimates the dose rate by a factor of 2. A statistically significant inverse relationship was found between the patient dose rate and patient BMI and an empirically derived equation relating these two quantities was reported. On average, male patient dose rates were 3.5% lower than female dose rates, which may be attributed to the larger average BMI of the male patient group.
Keyphrases
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  • case report
  • chronic kidney disease
  • newly diagnosed
  • ejection fraction
  • weight gain
  • physical activity
  • peritoneal dialysis