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Radiation safety considerations for the use of radium-224-calciumcarbonate-microparticles in patients with peritoneal metastasis

AIM: Two ongoing phase I studies are investigating the use of radium-224 adsorbed to calcium carbonate micro particles ((224)Ra-CaCO(3)-MP) to treat peritoneal metastasis originating from colorectal or ovarian cancer. The aim of this work was to study the level of radiation exposure from the patient...

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Autores principales: Grønningsæter, Simen Rykkje, Blakkisrud, Johan, Selboe, Silje, Revheim, Mona-Elisabeth, Bruland, Øyvind Sverre, Bønsdorff, Tina Bjørnlund, Larsen, Stein Gunnar, Stokke, Caroline
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9945525/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36844217
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2023.1058914
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author Grønningsæter, Simen Rykkje
Blakkisrud, Johan
Selboe, Silje
Revheim, Mona-Elisabeth
Bruland, Øyvind Sverre
Bønsdorff, Tina Bjørnlund
Larsen, Stein Gunnar
Stokke, Caroline
author_facet Grønningsæter, Simen Rykkje
Blakkisrud, Johan
Selboe, Silje
Revheim, Mona-Elisabeth
Bruland, Øyvind Sverre
Bønsdorff, Tina Bjørnlund
Larsen, Stein Gunnar
Stokke, Caroline
author_sort Grønningsæter, Simen Rykkje
collection PubMed
description AIM: Two ongoing phase I studies are investigating the use of radium-224 adsorbed to calcium carbonate micro particles ((224)Ra-CaCO(3)-MP) to treat peritoneal metastasis originating from colorectal or ovarian cancer. The aim of this work was to study the level of radiation exposure from the patients to workers at the hospital, carers and members of the public. METHOD: Six patients from the phase 1 trial in patients with colorectal cancer were included in this study. Two days after cytoreductive surgery, they were injected with 7 MBq of (224)Ra-CaCO(3)-MP. At approximately 3, 24 and 120 h after injection, the patients underwent measurements with an ionization chamber and a scintillator-based iodide detector, and whole body gamma camera imaging. The patient was modelled as a planar source to calculate dose rate as a function of distance. Scenarios varying in duration and distance from the patient were created to estimate the potential effective doses from external exposure. Urine and blood samples were collected at approximately 3, 6, 24, 48 and 120 h after injection of (224)Ra-CaCO(3)-MP, to estimate the activity concentration of (224)Ra and (212)Pb. RESULTS: The patients’ median effective whole-body half-life of (224)Ra-CaCO(3)-MP ranged from 2.6 to 3.5 days, with a mean value of 3.0 days. In the scenarios with exposure at the hospital (first 8 days), sporadic patient contact resulted in a range of 3.9–6.8 μSv per patient, and daily contact resulted in 4.3–31.3 μSv depending on the scenario. After discharge from the hospital, at day 8, the highest effective dose was received by those with close daily contact; 18.7–83.0 μSv. The highest activity concentrations of (224)Ra and (212)Pb in urine and blood were found within 6 h, with maximum values of 70 Bq/g for (224)Ra and 628 Bq/g for (212)Pb. CONCLUSION: The number of patients treated with (224)Ra-CaCO(3)-MP that a single hospital worker - involved in extensive care - can receive per year, before effective doses of 6 mSv from external exposure is exceeded, is in the order of 200–400. Members of the public and family members are expected to receive well below 0.25 mSv, and therefore, no restrictions to reduce external exposure should be required.
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spelling pubmed-99455252023-02-23 Radiation safety considerations for the use of radium-224-calciumcarbonate-microparticles in patients with peritoneal metastasis Grønningsæter, Simen Rykkje Blakkisrud, Johan Selboe, Silje Revheim, Mona-Elisabeth Bruland, Øyvind Sverre Bønsdorff, Tina Bjørnlund Larsen, Stein Gunnar Stokke, Caroline Front Med (Lausanne) Medicine AIM: Two ongoing phase I studies are investigating the use of radium-224 adsorbed to calcium carbonate micro particles ((224)Ra-CaCO(3)-MP) to treat peritoneal metastasis originating from colorectal or ovarian cancer. The aim of this work was to study the level of radiation exposure from the patients to workers at the hospital, carers and members of the public. METHOD: Six patients from the phase 1 trial in patients with colorectal cancer were included in this study. Two days after cytoreductive surgery, they were injected with 7 MBq of (224)Ra-CaCO(3)-MP. At approximately 3, 24 and 120 h after injection, the patients underwent measurements with an ionization chamber and a scintillator-based iodide detector, and whole body gamma camera imaging. The patient was modelled as a planar source to calculate dose rate as a function of distance. Scenarios varying in duration and distance from the patient were created to estimate the potential effective doses from external exposure. Urine and blood samples were collected at approximately 3, 6, 24, 48 and 120 h after injection of (224)Ra-CaCO(3)-MP, to estimate the activity concentration of (224)Ra and (212)Pb. RESULTS: The patients’ median effective whole-body half-life of (224)Ra-CaCO(3)-MP ranged from 2.6 to 3.5 days, with a mean value of 3.0 days. In the scenarios with exposure at the hospital (first 8 days), sporadic patient contact resulted in a range of 3.9–6.8 μSv per patient, and daily contact resulted in 4.3–31.3 μSv depending on the scenario. After discharge from the hospital, at day 8, the highest effective dose was received by those with close daily contact; 18.7–83.0 μSv. The highest activity concentrations of (224)Ra and (212)Pb in urine and blood were found within 6 h, with maximum values of 70 Bq/g for (224)Ra and 628 Bq/g for (212)Pb. CONCLUSION: The number of patients treated with (224)Ra-CaCO(3)-MP that a single hospital worker - involved in extensive care - can receive per year, before effective doses of 6 mSv from external exposure is exceeded, is in the order of 200–400. Members of the public and family members are expected to receive well below 0.25 mSv, and therefore, no restrictions to reduce external exposure should be required. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-02-08 /pmc/articles/PMC9945525/ /pubmed/36844217 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2023.1058914 Text en Copyright © 2023 Grønningsæter, Blakkisrud, Selboe, Revheim, Bruland, Bønsdorff, Larsen and Stokke. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Medicine
Grønningsæter, Simen Rykkje
Blakkisrud, Johan
Selboe, Silje
Revheim, Mona-Elisabeth
Bruland, Øyvind Sverre
Bønsdorff, Tina Bjørnlund
Larsen, Stein Gunnar
Stokke, Caroline
Radiation safety considerations for the use of radium-224-calciumcarbonate-microparticles in patients with peritoneal metastasis
title Radiation safety considerations for the use of radium-224-calciumcarbonate-microparticles in patients with peritoneal metastasis
title_full Radiation safety considerations for the use of radium-224-calciumcarbonate-microparticles in patients with peritoneal metastasis
title_fullStr Radiation safety considerations for the use of radium-224-calciumcarbonate-microparticles in patients with peritoneal metastasis
title_full_unstemmed Radiation safety considerations for the use of radium-224-calciumcarbonate-microparticles in patients with peritoneal metastasis
title_short Radiation safety considerations for the use of radium-224-calciumcarbonate-microparticles in patients with peritoneal metastasis
title_sort radiation safety considerations for the use of radium-224-calciumcarbonate-microparticles in patients with peritoneal metastasis
topic Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9945525/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36844217
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2023.1058914
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