The
information in this column is intended for informational
purposes only, and does not constitute medical advice or
recommendations by the author. Please consult with your
physician before making any lifestyle or medication changes, or if you
have any other concerns regarding your health.
CORONARY
ARTERY CT SCANS & CANCER RISK
It has been
estimated by experts that up to 2 percent of all cancer cases are
caused by
exposure to medical x-ray tests.
Although it is believed that there is no completely safe
level of
exposure to x-rays, it is well known that exposure to increasing doses
of
x-rays, as well as undergoing repeated x-ray examinations, increases
the risk
of cancer formation.
The increasing
use of CT scanners (which can expose patients to significant doses of
radiation) to screen asymptomatic patients for coronary artery disease
has been
a source of growing concern among many cancer experts.
While the detection of coronary artery
calcifications and coronary artery narrowing (stenosis) on
multi-detector CT
scanners are powerful predictors of future cardiac disease events, it
remains
unclear, at this time, whether or not this approach to coronary artery
disease
screening offers any significant clinical benefits to otherwise
asymptomatic
patients.
A newly
published clinical research study, which appears in the current issue
of the Annals of Internal Medicine,
further
quantifies the potential cancer risk associated with the use CT scans
to screen
for coronary artery disease.
Because there
are no nationally standardized protocols for CT scan cardiac screening
examinations, the authors of this study considered several commonly
used CT scan
protocols, and then calculated the actual dose of radiation delivered
to patients
with each of these scan protocols.
Using
long-term data derived from Japanese atomic bomb survivors, the
researchers
then estimated the added cancer risk to patients receiving coronary
artery
screening CT scans.
One important (and
concerning) finding from this study is that radiation doses delivered
to
patients vary by more than 10-fold among the different CT scan
protocols in
common use throughout the United States.
Based upon
existing screening recommendations, the authors calculated the added
cancer
risk associated with adult patients undergoing coronary artery
screening CT
scans every 5 years between the ages of 45 and 75 years for men, and
every 5
years between the ages of 55 and 75 years for women.
Using the very conservative assumption that
all patients are exposed to a dose of radiation equivalent to the
average of
all commonly used CT scan protocols, the authors calculated that the
lifetime
increased incidence of cancer was 4.2 new cases of cancer per 10,000
men, and
6.2 new cases of cancer per 10,000 women.
Based upon the known effects of radiation to the organs
contained in the
chest area, approximately 71 percent of the cancer cases caused by CT
scans of
the heart would be in the form of lung cancer, while 20 percent of
these
“excess” cancers would be breast cancers induced in women. Another 12 percent of
these radiation-induced
cancers would be in the form of leukemia in men, while 4 percent of
these otherwise
preventable cancers would manifest as leukemia in women.
Unfortunately,
there is currently no scientific consensus regarding the clinical
benefit, if
any, of using CT scanners to detect coronary artery disease in
asymptomatic
patients, as there is no high level clinical research data available to
prove
that this screening approach reduces cardiac disease events, or
cardiac-associated
deaths. Therefore,
all that can be
confidently said, at this time, about the routine use of CT scans to
screen for
coronary artery disease is that it is, undoubtedly, associated with a
small but
not insignificant risk of otherwise preventable cancers. Moreover, when you
consider that the authors
of this study used very conservative estimates regarding absorbed
radiation
doses in patients undergoing coronary artery screening, the actual
cancer risk
associated with many of cardiac screening CT scan protocols in current
use is
probably significantly higher than what this study predicts.
In my own case,
I underwent two separate CT scans, to assess for both coronary artery
calcifications and coronary artery narrowing (stenosis), as part of a
“VIP
Physical” in 2006. At
the time, there
was great enthusiasm for the routine use of CT scanners for this
purpose. However,
based upon the available data (including
the data from this study), I have recently decided that I will not
undergo any
additional heart screening CT scans until and unless compelling
clinical data
comes along to suggest that the benefit from such scans outweighs their
potential risks. If
you have been
considering undergoing a routine cardiac screening CT scan, my advice
is to
first discuss the data contained in this clinical study with your
Internist or
Cardiologist, and ask them to clarify both the potential risks and
benefits, in
your particular case, of undergoing a coronary artery screening CT scan.
Meanwhile more
research is needed to clarify what, if any, health benefits can be
reasonably claimed
for routine coronary artery screening CT scans in asymptomatic patients. Finally, in view of the
immense variation in
radiation doses associated with the various CT scanning protocols in
common use
today, professional radiology societies and boards should quickly work
to reach
a consensus on standardizing these protocols in such a way that
unnecessary
radiation exposure is minimized.
Disclaimer:
As always, my advice to readers is to seek the
advice of your
physician
before making any
significant changes in medications, diet, or
level of physical activity
Dr. Wascher
is an oncologic surgeon, a professor
of surgery, a widely published author, and the
Physician-in-Chief for Surgical
Oncology at the Kaiser Permanente healthcare system in Orange County,
California

(Anticipated
Publication Date: March 2010)

(Click
above image for TV36 interview of Dr. Wascher)
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Robert
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