Nuclear Engineering and Technology

Radioiodine internal dose coefficients specific for Koreans
Kwon TE, Chung Y and Lee C
This study developed internal dose coefficients for radioiodine, tailored to the Korean population, by incorporating the Korean biokinetic model along with the Korean S values. The observed differences in dose coefficients for Koreans compared to the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) reference values noticeably varied depending on physical half-lives of iodine isotopes. For longer-lived isotopes such as I-125 and I-129, significant differences in thyroid dose coefficients were observed, with ratios (Korean/ICRP) from 0.30 to 0.55, indicating that actual doses for Koreans can be considerably lower than those evaluated based on the ICRP data. However, for short-lived iodine isotopes, such as I-131, the thyroid dose coefficients were comparable to the ICRP reference values (ratio=0.95-0.98). These comparable dose coefficients resulted from the lower thyroidal iodine uptake in the Korean model being almost entirely offset by the higher thyroid self-absorption S values in the Korean phantoms. Additionally, this study delves into the substantial differences in absorbed dose coefficients for non-thyroidal regions and effective dose coefficients, which arose not only from physiological/anatomical variability but also technical differences in phantom design. The use of Korean-specific dose coefficients is advisable particularly in scenarios predicting elevated doses, yielding a more precise and clinically relevant dose assessment.
Korean-specific iodine S values for use in internal dosimetry
Kwon TE, Chung Y and Lee C
The use of iodine S values derived using the International Commission Radiological Protection (ICRP) phantoms may introduce significant bias in internal dosimetry for Koreans due to anatomical variability. In the current study, we produced an extensive dataset of Korean S values for selected five iodine radioisotopes (I-125, I-129, I-131, I-133, and I-134) for use in radiation protection. To calculate S values, we implemented Monte Carlo simulations using the Mesh-type Reference Korean Phantoms (MRKPs), developed in a high-quality/fidelity mesh format. Noticeable differences were observed in S value comparisons between the Korean and ICRP reference phantoms with ratios (Korean/ICRP) widely ranging from 0.16 to 6.2. The majority of S value ratios were lower than the unity in Korean phantoms (interquartile range =0.47-1.28; mean = 0.96; median = 0.69). The S values provided in the current study will be extensively utilized in iodine internal dosimetry for Koreans.
Organ dose reconstruction for the radiation epidemiological study of Korean radiation workers: the first dose evaluation for the Korean Radiation Worker Study (KRWS)
Kwon TE, Jeong A, Ha WH, Lee D, Seo S, Cho J, Kim E, Chung Y and Park S
The Korea Institute of Radiological and Medical Sciences has started a radiation epidemiological study, titled "Korean Radiation Worker Study," to evaluate the health effects of occupational exposure to radiation. As a part of this study, we investigated the methodologies and results of reconstructing organ-specific absorbed doses based on personal dose equivalent, (10), reported from 1984 to 2019 for 20,605 Korean radiation workers. For the organ dose reconstruction, representative exposure scenarios (i.e., radiation energy and exposure geometry) were first determined according to occupational groups, and dose coefficients for converting (10) to organ absorbed doses were then appropriately taken based on the exposure scenarios. Individual annual doses and individual cumulative doses were reconstructed for 27 organs, and the highest values were observed in the thyroid doses (on average 0.77 mGy/y and 10.47 mGy, respectively). Mean values of individual cumulative absorbed doses for the red bone marrow, colon, and lungs were 7.83, 8.78, and 8.43 mSv, respectively. Most of the organ doses were maximum for industrial radiographers, followed by nuclear power plant workers, medical workers, and other facility workers. The organ dose database established in this study will be utilized for organ-specific risk estimation in the Korean Radiation Worker Study.
Organ dose conversion coefficients in CT scans for Korean adult males and females
Lee C, Won T, Yeom YS, Griffin K, Lee C and Kim KP
Dose monitoring in CT patients requires accurate dose estimation but most of the CT dose calculation tools are based on Caucasian computational phantoms. We established a library of organ dose conversion coefficients for Korean adults by using four Korean adult male and two female voxel phantoms combined with Monte Carlo simulation techniques. We calculated organ dose conversion coefficients for head, chest, abdomen and pelvis, and chest-abdomen-pelvis scans, and compared the results with the existing data calculated from Caucasian phantoms. We derived representative organ doses for Korean adults using Korean CT dose surveys combined with the dose conversion coefficients. The organ dose conversion coefficients from the Korean adult phantoms were slightly greater than those of the ICRP reference phantoms: up to 13% for the brain doses in head scans and up to 10% for the dose to the small intestine wall in abdominal scans. We derived Korean representative doses to major organs in head, chest, and AP scans using mean CTDI values extracted from the Korean nationwide surveys conducted in 2008 and 2017. The Korean-specific organ dose conversion coefficients should be useful to readily estimate organ absorbed doses for Korean adult male and female patients undergoing CT scans.
DOSE COEFFICIENTS OF MESH-TYPE ICRP REFERENCE COMPUTATIONAL PHANTOMS FOR EXTERNAL EXPOSURES OF NEUTRONS, PROTONS, AND HELIUM IONS
Yeom YS, Choi C, Han H, Shin B, Nguyen TT, Han MC, Kim CH and Lee C
To overcome inherent limitations of the Voxel-type Reference Computational Phantoms (VRCPs) due to the limited voxel resolutions and the nature of voxel geometry, the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) has developed the adult male and female Mesh-type Reference Computational Phantoms (MRCPs). We previously used the MRCPs to calculate a complete set of dose coefficients (DCs) for idealized external exposures of photons and electrons (Yeom et al. NET in press). In the present study, we extended the previous study to include additional radiation particles (neutrons, protons, and helium ions) into the DC library by conducing Monte Carlo radiation transport simulations with the Geant4 code. The MRPC-based DCs were compared with the existing reference DCs of ICRP 116 which are based on the ICRP VRCPs to investigate impact of the new mesh-type reference phantoms on the DC values. We found that the MRCPs generally provide DCs of organ/tissue doses and effective doses similar to those from the VRCPs for penetrating radiations (uncharged particles), whereas significant DC differences were observed for weakly penetrating radiations (charged particles) mainly due to the improved representation of the detailed anatomical structures in the MRCPs over the VRCPs.