CT scan triples risk of brain cancer in kids?

Radiation exposure from multiple CT scans in childhood may triple the risk of developing brain cancer and leukaemia, a new study has warned.
Researchers led by a team from the Newcastle Univ-ersity looked at the records of 175,000 children and young people under 21 aged under 21 who had CT (computerised tomography) scans in British hospitals between 1985 and 2002. They found that radiation exposure received from two to three CT scans of the head in childhood aged under 15, with a cumulative dose of 50 to 60 milligray (a unit of absorbed radiation) can triple the risk of brain cancer later in life. The same dose to bone marrow would be produced by five to ten head CT scans, which would triple the risk of leukaemia, the researchers found.
While the absolute risk of these cancers occurring after CT is small, radiation doses from CT scans should be kept as low as possible and alternative procedures, that do not use ionising radiation, should be considered if appropriate, the researchers reported in the Lancet. As radiation-related cancer takes time to develop, the team examined data on cancer cases up until 2009. It was found that the increased risk of one extra case of leukaemia and one extra brain tumour for 10,000 CT head scans of children aged under ten.
Mark Pearce, an epidemiologist from Newcastle University who led the study, said: “We found significant increases in the risk of leukaemia and brain tumours, following CT in childhood and young adulthood. “The immediate benefits of CT outweigh the risks in many settings... Doses have come down dramatically over time — but we need to do more to reduce them. This should be a priority for the clinical community and manufacturers,” he concluded.
CT scans, during which an X-ray tube rotates aro-und the patient’s body to produce detailed images of internal organs are useful for children because anaesthesia is not required.

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