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An Investigation of Body Size Impact on Organ Doses for Neutron External Exposures Using the MRCP-based Phantom Library

Authors
Han, HaeginChoi, Ji WonLee, YumiLee, Soo MinKim, Chan HyeongChoi, Hyun JoonYeom, Yeon Soo
Issue Date
Apr-2023
Publisher
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
Keywords
dose, external; dose, organ; Monte Carlo; phantom, mathematical
Citation
HEALTH PHYSICS, v.124, no.4, pp.316 - 325
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
HEALTH PHYSICS
Volume
124
Number
4
Start Page
316
End Page
325
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/184986
DOI
10.1097/HP.0000000000001672
ISSN
0017-9078
Abstract
In a recent study, a comprehensive library composed of 212 phantoms with different body sizes was established by deforming the adult male and female mesh-type reference computational phantoms (MRCPs) of ICRP Publication 145 and the next-generation ICRP reference phantoms over the current voxel-type reference phantoms of ICRP Publication 110. In this study, as an application of the MRCP-based phantom library, we investigated dosimetric impacts due to the different body sizes for neutron external exposures. A comprehensive dataset of organ/tissue dose coefficients (DCs) for idealized external neutron beams with four phantoms for each sex representatively selected from the phantom library were produced by performing Monte Carlo simulations using the Geant4 code. The body size-dependent DCs produced in this study were systematically analyzed, observing that the variation of the body weights overall played a more important role in organ/tissue dose calculations than the variation of the body heights. We also observed that the reference body-size DCs based on the MRCPs indeed significantly under- or overestimated the DCs produced using the phantoms, especially for those much heavier (male: 175 cm and 140 kg; female: 165 cm and 140 kg) than the reference body sizes (male: 176 cm and 73 kg; female: 163 cm and 60 kg) by up to 1.6 or 3.3 times, respectively. We believe that the use of the body size-dependent DCs, together with the reference body-size DCs, should be beneficial for more reliable organ/tissue dose estimates of individuals considering their body sizes rather than the most common conventional approach, i.e., the sole use of the reference body size DCs.
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