Dosimetric Considerations in Radioimmunotherapy and Systemic Radionuclide Therapies: A Review

  • Loke K
  • Padhy A
  • Ng D
  • et al.
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Abstract

Radiopharmaceutical therapy, once touted as the "magic bullet" in radiation oncology, is increasingly being used in the treatment of a variety of malignancies; albeit in later disease stages. With ever-increasing public and medical awareness of radiation effects, radiation dosimetry is becoming more important. Dosimetry allows administration of the maximum tolerated radiation dose to the tumor/organ to be treated but limiting radiation to critical organs. Traditional tumor dosimetry involved acquiring pretherapy planar scans and plasma estimates with a diagnostic dose of intended radiopharmaceuticals. New advancements in single photon emission computed tomography and positron emission tomography systems allow semi-quantitative measurements of radiation dosimetry thus allowing treatments tailored to each individual patient.

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Loke, K., Padhy, A., Ng, D., Goh, A., & Divgi, C. (2011). Dosimetric Considerations in Radioimmunotherapy and Systemic Radionuclide Therapies: A Review. World Journal of Nuclear Medicine, 10(02), 122–138. https://doi.org/10.4103/1450-1147.89780

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