alexander brandl erhs 630 radiation and tissue weighting factors environmental and radiological...

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Alexander Brandl ERHS 630 Radiation and Tissue Weighting Factors Environmental and Radiological Health Sciences

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Alexander Brandl

ERHS 630

Radiation and TissueWeighting Factors

Environmental and Radiological Health Sciences

System of Quantities• Dosimetric quantities for external radiation (from ICRP 74 / ICRU 57)

Absorbed to Effective Dose

• Dose relations• (from ICRP

103)

• Defined for all types of ionizing radiation• Quotient of

• mean energy imparted in a volume element

• divided by the mass of matter in that volume element

• Definition at a point in tissue / organ• used to define operational quantities

• Average over tissue / organ• used to define protection quantities

Absorbed Dose

• Mean absorbed dose averaged over a specified tissue or organ, DT (absorbed dose distribution in the body or phantom is known)

• SI unit [J kg-1] or [Gy]

Organ Absorbed Dose

• For both, operational and protection quantities• absorbed dose distributions are weighted• to account for biological effectiveness

• Old definition:• charged particles depositing absorbed dose

at the point of interaction in tissue• problem: radiation type depositing dose

might be different than incident radiation• Current definition:

• radiation incident on the body

Radiation Weighting

• Relative biological effectiveness, RBE• different types of ionizing radiation have

varying effectiveness in producing radiation damage in a biological system

• alpha-particles more effective than gamma radiation

• neutrons more effective than gamma radiation

• determining factor?

Radiation Weighting (II)

• Relative biological effectiveness, RBE• determining factor?

• LET• the higher the LET, the higher the potential

for damage• RBE

• ratio of amount of energy deposited by a reference radiation (generally low-LET)

to produce a given biological effect• to the amount of energy by any other

radiation to produce the same effect

Radiation Weighting (III)

• Relative biological effectiveness• can vary widely

• RBE values are generally largest for small levels of effect

• generally depends on• LET• dose rate• dose fractionation• type and magnitude of biological

endpoint

Radiation Weighting (IV)

Radiation Weighting (V)• Cell killing: RBE as a function of LET (from Turner)

• Quality factor, Q• defined at the point of interaction• applied to D at point of interaction• still used by ICRU for operational quantities

• Radiation weighting factor, wR

• determined by the radiation incident on the body

• applied to DT in the tissue / organ of interest

• used by ICRP for protection quantities

Radiation Weighting (VI)

• Radiation weighting for operational quantities only• Mean quality factor in matter,

• function of L

• averaged over a volume (tissue / organ)

Quality Factor

Quality Factor (II)• Quality factor as a function of LET

• particle LET in water• (from ICRP 103)

• Retained here mainly for historical reasons• Denoted as H• Product of Q and D at a point in tissue

• SI unit [J kg-1] or [Sv]

Dose Equivalent

• Defined for protection quantities

• DT is multiplied by the radiation weighting factor, wR, to account for relative radiation detriment due to different types of radiation

• wR concerned only with incident radiation

• no need to account for secondary particles, etc.

• Averaging already applied to DT

Radiation Weighting Factor

Rad. Weighting Factor (II)

• wR for various types of radiation• (missing ones may beapproximated by - ICRP 60)• (from ICRP 103)

Rad. Weighting Factor (III)

• wR for neutrons

• (from ICRP 103)

• Protection quantity according to ICRP

• Denoted as HT (HT,R)

• Product of DT,R in an organ or tissue and the relevant wR

• SI unit [J kg-1] or [Sv]

Equivalent Dose

• Relates equivalent dose (in an organ or tissue) to effective dose (whole body)• Based on

• epidemiological studies of cancer induction• experimental genetic data after radiation

exposure• risk of hereditary disease over first two generations • judgement

• Represent mean values for humans, averaged over

• both sexes• all ages

Tissue Weighting Factor

• Takes into account different relative radiosensitivities of organs and tissues

• Are relative values, SwT = 1

• uniform dose distribution over whole body:

• E numerically equal to every HT

• Separate assessment of risk of radiation- induced stochastic effects in males and females• Calculation of sex-specific radiation detriment

• Determination of sex-averaged wT values

Tissue Weighting Factor (II)

Tissue Weighting Factor (III)• Comparison “old” and current values

• (from ICRP 103)

• Main changes ICRP 60 to ICRP 103• breast 0.05 to 0.12• gonads 0.20 to 0.08• remainder tissue 0.05 to 0.12• additionally, 0.01 for brain, salivary glands

• wT appropriate for both sexes and all ages

• special attention to thyroid, ovaries• thyroid: 0.04 allows for high susceptibility in

children• ovaries: 0.08 gonads, ovaries 0.036 + 0.039

heritable

Tissue Weighting Factor (IV)

• How to treat “remainder tissue?”

• Remainder: wT = 0.12

• No further mass weighting• since 13 tissues are specified for each

sex, each tissue wT < 0.01

• Equivalent dose for remainder (sex-specific)

Tissue Weighting Factor (V)

• Effective dose• in the whole body• due to radiation R

• SI unit [J kg-1] or [Sv]

Effective Dose