The purpose of this study was to measure the scattered dose to out-of-field organs from head and neck radiotherapy in pediatric patients and to estimate the risk for second cancer induction to individual organs. Radiotherapy for thalamic tumor, brain tumor, acute leukemia and Hodgkin's disease in the neck region was simulated on 5 and 10-year-old pediatric phantoms with a 6 MV photon beam. The radiation dose to thyroid, breast, lung, stomach, ovaries, bladder, liver, uterus, prostate and colon was measured using thermoluminescent dosimeters. The methodology, provided by the BEIR VII report was used for the second cancer risk estimations. Peripheral dose range for a simulated 5-year-old patient was 0.019%-1.572% of the given tumor dose. The corresponding range at the advanced patient age was reduced to 0.018%-1.468%. The second cancer risk per fraction for male patients varied from 3 to 215 per 1,000,000 patients depending upon the age at the time of exposure, primary cancer site and organ scattered dose. The corresponding risk for females was 1-1186 per 1,000,000 patients. The higher risk values were found for breast, thyroid and lung cancer development. The current data concerning the risk magnitude for developing subsequent neoplasms to various out-of-field organs may be of value for health care professionals in the follow-up studies of childhood cancer survivors.
This study was conducted to estimate the scattered thyroid dose and relevant second cancer risk from radiotherapy for extracranial tumours during childhood. Anteroposeterior and posteronaterior field irradiations employed during the treatment of Hodgkin's disease, neuroblastoma and Wilms' tumour were simulated on two humanoid phantoms representing 5- and 10-y-old patients. Measurements were performed using thermoluminescent dosemeters. Practical thyroid lead shields with thicknesses of 2-10 mm were placed in the phantoms' neck region. The lifetime risk for cancer induction was assessed using sex- and age-specific risk factors. Thyroid dose per monitor unit varied from 28.1 to 492.4 μGy by the primary irradiation site and patient's age. The 10-mm-thick lead shield led to a dose reduction up to 28.9 %. For typical prescribed tumour doses, the total risks for thyroid cancer development after radiotherapy of 5- and 10-y-old male patients were 0.05-0.99 and 0.03-0.48 %, respectively. The corresponding risks for females increased to 0.29-5.51 and 0.17-2.94 %.
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