Veille documentaire MTPH

Médecine du travail du personnel hospitalier

Radiation doses to staff involved in sentinel node operations for breast cancer.

Clin Physiol Funct Imaging. 2005 Jul;25(4):196-202.
Radiation doses to staff involved in sentinel node operations for breast cancer.
‘Klausen TL, Chakera AH, Friis E, Rank F, Hesse B, Holm S.
Department of Clinical Physiology and Nuclear Medicine, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark. thomas@pet.rh.dk’

BACKGROUND: The use of radioactive compounds for sentinel node biopsy is now a generally accepted part of the surgical treatment of breast cancer and melanoma, with the risk of radiation exposure to the operating team. The aim of this investigation was to study the levels of this exposure in relation to the permissible radiation dose limits. METHODS: The radiation exposure to the hands and bodies of the operating surgeons (the ‘risk persons’) was measured by thermoluminescent dosimeters in 79 operations and to the pathologists handling the specimens in 17 cases. Radioactivity and dose rate measurement from tumours and breast specimens were also performed. RESULTS: During an operation the mean skin dose (+/-SD) to the thermoluminescent dosimeters placed at the hand and the abdominal wall were 0.04 +/- 0.04 mSv (79 operations) and 0.01 +/- 0.02 mSv (67 operations) respectively. For the pathologist, the mean hand dose per operation was below the detection limit (17 operations). Correlation between the measured dose rate and the radioactive content of the tumours was 0.998. CONCLUSIONS: The radiation exposure to the staff involved in sentinel node (SN) biopsy for breast cancer using radioactive labelled tracers will be considerably below the permissible limits, even with high numbers of SN biopsy procedures. Pregnant staff members should participate in <100 SN operations.
MeSH Terms: Body Burden – Breast Neoplasms/pathology* – Breast Neoplasms/radionuclide imaging* – Breast Neoplasms/surgery – Humans – Lymph Nodes/pathology* – Lymph Nodes/radionuclide imaging* – Lymphatic Metastasis – Nuclear Medicine – Occupational Exposu

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