Finger doses due to 68Ga-labelled pharmaceuticals in PET departments—results of a multi-centre pilot study

Author:

McCann AnnORCID,Cherbuin Nicolas,Covens Peter,Dabin JérémieORCID,Haruz-Waschitz Sigalit,Gallo Lara,Datz Hanan,Wierts RoelORCID,Wrzesien Malgorzata,Zorz Alessandra,Cooke Jennie,Dowling Anita,Kollaard RobertORCID

Abstract

Abstract Introduction: Although the use of 68Ga has increased substantially in nuclear medicine over the last decade, there is limited information available on occupational exposure due to 68Ga. The purpose of this study is to determine the occupational extremity exposure during the preparation, dispensing and administration of 68Ga-labelled radiopharmaceuticals. Method: Workers in eight centres wore a ring dosimeter for all tasks involving 68Ga-labelled radiopharmaceuticals for a minimum of one month. Additionally, the fingertip dose was monitored in two centres and the hand with the highest ring dose during 68Ga procedures was also identified in one centre. Results: The median normalised ring dose for 68Ga procedures was found to be 0.25 mSv GBq−1 (range 0.01–3.34). The normalised 68Ga ring doses recorded in this study are similar to that found in the literature for 18F. This study is consistent with previous findings that the highest extremity dose is found on the non-dominant hand. A limited sub study in two of the centres showed a median fingertip to base of the finger dose ratio of 4.3. Based on this median ratio, the extrapolated annual 68Ga fingertip dose for 94% of the workers monitored in this study would be below Category B dose limit (150 mSv) and no worker would exceed Category A dose limit (500 mSv). Conclusion: When appropriate shielding and radiation protection practices are employed, the extremity dose due to 68Ga is comparable to that of 18F and is expected to be well below the regulatory limits for the majority of workers.

Funder

Irish Research Council

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Waste Management and Disposal,General Medicine

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