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. 1989 Nov;30(11):1856-64.

Limitations of conventional internal dosimetry at the cellular level

Affiliations
  • PMID: 2809750
Free article

Limitations of conventional internal dosimetry at the cellular level

G M Makrigiorgos et al. J Nucl Med. 1989 Nov.
Free article

Abstract

A theoretic examination of the validity at the cellular level of assumptions used in classic internal dosimetry has been undertaken. An alternate dosimetric model accounting for the consequences of selective uptake of a radiolabeled compound by specific cells in a multicellular cluster of hexagonal geometry has been developed. At the cellular level, derived dose estimates for electrons have been compared to dose estimates obtained employing the assumptions of conventional internal dosimetry. The study has been performed for all electron energies and then applied specifically to electrons emitted by 99mTc, 201Tl, 111In, and 123I. The dosimetric consequences of altering (a) the intracellular-to-extracellular radionuclide concentration, (b) the labeled cell density, and (c) the cell size have been examined for the labeled and nonlabeled cells in a cell cluster, and the conditions in which conventional dosimetry underestimates or overestimates the dose to individual cells have been indicated. It is shown that when selective intracellular uptake of a radiolabeled compound occurs in specific cells within a cell cluster, conventional dosimetry underestimates the radiation dose delivered to the labeled cells by twofold to more than 25-fold if the emitted electrons have ranges of a few micrometers or less, i.e., energies smaller than approximately 10 keV. Under the same conditions, conventional dosimetry overestimates slightly (20% to 50%) the electron radiation dose to the nonlabeled cells of the cell cluster. It is shown that inclusion of photons in the calculation of the total dose to individual cells does not alter significantly the conclusions of the present investigation.

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