New research examining the 10-year mortality of patients after undergoing computed tomography (CT) exams may lead to a reevaluation of CT-associated radiation risks.
For the retrospective study, recently published in the European Journal of Radiology, researchers examined different radiation cumulative effective dose (CED) levels and 10-year mortality rates for 36,545 patients who had CT exams at a large tertiary care facility in 2013. The different CED groups included those who had 0 to < 10 mSv CED (group A:14,031 patients), 10 to < 50 mSv CED (group B:18,989 patients), 50 to < 100 mSv CED (group C: 2,756 patients) and > 100 mSV CED (group D:769 patients), according to the study.
The researchers noted significantly higher mortality rates at one and two years for groups D and C. Specifically, group D had a 6.7 times higher mortality rate at one year (23.5 percent) and a fivefold higher rate at two years (8.6 percent) in comparison to group A (3.5 percent and 1.7 percent respectively). Group C had a 4.3 times higher mortality rate at one year (15.2 percent) and a 3.9 times higher rate at two years (6.7 percent) in contrast to group A, according to the study authors.
However, the researchers found that the mortality rates peaked at year two across the groups with a noticeable decline in mortality rates afterward. At year 10, the study authors noted low equivalent mortality rates for groups D and B (0.5 percent), an 0.8 percent rate for group C and an 0.3 rate for group A.
The study authors emphasized that 37 percent of the group D cohort (who received > 100 mSV CED) were alive at 10 years and 48 percent of the group C cohort (who received 50 to < 100 mSv CED) were alive at 10 years.
“Based on this data, the argument that patients who receive radiation dose over 50 mSv are sick enough to die within a few years from prior diseases is unsound,” wrote lead study author Maria T. Mataac, an assistant researcher at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, and colleagues.
Beyond the inherent limitations of a retrospective, single-center study, the authors emphasized the observational nature of the study and noted their findings do not show a direct link between mortality and radiation exposure from CT exams.
Barbara Jacoby is an award winning blogger that has contributed her writings to multiple online publications that have touched readers worldwide.

