Answer to Question #12830 Submitted to "Ask the Experts"
Category: Medical and Dental Patient Issues — Diagnostic X Ray and CT
The following question was answered by an expert in the appropriate field:
I know you do not calculate risk, but I am struggling to understand all of the statistics I read online. I was in an accident when I was 13. I had a full-body computerized tomography (CT) scan and a follow-up head CT a year later. This was at a pediatric facility. Fast forward to now. I recently had a CT pulmonary angiogram (PA) to rule out an embolism two days after having my baby. I keep reading statistics about how 1 in 80 CT PA leads to cancer in a young woman. Or I see 1 in 143. Just for this one scan. When I add in my full-body scan as a child, I can't help but feel I am doomed to develop cancer. Is there anything I can learn to help reassure me?
Your CT scans have not doomed you to develop cancer. The risks that you see online are hypothetical risks determined by assuming that there is some increase in risk. But, at radiation doses seen from diagnostic imaging, including CT scans, the risk cannot be scientifically proven. Radiation risk has only been observed at much higher doses. In other words, scientific evidence does not support the risks you quoted.
Your CT scans would be well below 100 mSv. If the effective dose is less than 100 mSv the risk is too small to be seen, if a risk exists at all. This is why we do not calculate risks. At radiation doses associated with CT scans and other diagnostic imaging, we would be calculating a theoretical risk that has not been observed and cannot be proven scientifically. For more information on the risk you may want to check out the HPS position statement, Radiation Risk in Perspective and the American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM) position statement on radiation risk from medical imaging procedures.
The bottom line is that your cancer risk is virtually the same now as it would have been if you did not have the CT scans. For women living in the United States, the chance of developing cancer in their lifetime is around 37.5%, or 1 in 2.67.
Kent Lambert, CHP, FHPS