Full Body Scans Raise Cancer Risk
People who pay for whole-body X-ray
scans in the hope of finding tumors at their earliest stages may,
ironically, be raising their overall risk of cancer, doctors warned.
The scans are marketed as a way
to catch cancer before symptoms begin, but the radiation from
the scans themselves could cause cancer, the researchers said.
CT or computed tomography scans
involve X-rays, but computer software and multiple angles produce
a higher-quality image than the traditional flat X-ray.
The scans are not the same as magnetic
resonance imaging or MRI scans, which do not expose the body to
radiation.
Writing in the September issue
of the journal Radiology, radiation oncologist David Brenner and
colleagues at Columbia University in New York said whole-body
CT scans pack a considerable radiation wallop.
"The radiation dose from a full-body
CT scan is comparable to the doses received by some of the atomic-bomb
survivors from Hiroshima and Nagasaki, where there is clear evidence
of increased cancer risk," Brenner said in a statement.
They studied survivors who got
low doses of radiation from the bombs, not those who got the highest
doses.
The dose from a single full-body
CT is only slightly lower than the mean dose experienced by some
atomic bomb survivors, they said, and is nearly 100 times that
of a typical screening mammogram.
A 45-year-old person who gets one
full-body CT screening would have an estimated lifetime cancer
death risk of approximately 0.08 percent, which would produce
cancer in one in 1,200 people, they estimated.
However, a 45-year-old who has
annual full-body CT scans for 30 years would accrue an estimated
lifetime cancer mortality risk of about 1.9 percent or almost
one in 50.
The risk may be worth it for someone
who knows he or she has a high probability of cancer, such as
those with inherited genetic mutations or a family history of
the disease, Brenner said.
Cancer is the second leading cause
of death in the United States after heart disease and is expected
to kill 550,000 people this year.
Reference
Source 89
August 31, 2004
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