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LetterLetters

Estimating cancer risk from radiation

Edward S. Weiss
Canadian Family Physician January 2018, 64 (1) 8;
Edward S. Weiss
Toronto, Ont
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I appreciate Dr Vakil’s helpful summary of the attendant risks of radiologic imaging in the October issue of Canadian Family Physician.1 Given the difficulty of determining the absolute risk of a given procedure from the radiation exposure alone, I usually find it helpful to use a calculator that takes into account a patient’s age and sex in addition to his or her radiation exposure. In this manner, it is possible to estimate a baseline cancer risk for a given patient, as well as the additional risk that might be expected from an x-ray or computed tomography scan. For example, using the calculator at X-RayRisk.com (www.xrayrisk.com/calculator/calculator.php), I can estimate that a 50-year-old male patient who is considering a computed tomography scan of the abdomen can expect his future probability of cancer to increase by 0.04%. This translates into a number needed to harm of 2472.

When considering that the additional cancer risk posed by a radiologic procedure is likely to only manifest many years in the future, without a clear causal link to the inciting event, the individual patient might be more likely to undergo a necessary imaging test if they know the absolute numbers involved.

Footnotes

  • Competing interests

    None declared

  • Copyright© the College of Family Physicians of Canada

Reference

  1. 1.
    1. Vakil C
    . Radiation and medical procedures. How do we do no harm? Can Fam Physician 2017;63:774-5.

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