National programme for the reliability of ionizing radiation measurements based on inter-laboratory comparisons (ILCs): ILC n°2 ‘radiopharmaceutical activities’
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
A national Inter-Laboratory Comparisons (ILCs) programme was organized in Italy in 2022 by the Italian National Institute of Ionizing Radiation Metrology (INMRI), belonging to ENEA (Italian National Agency for New Technologies, Energy and Sustainable Economic Development), under the auspices of the Ministry of Enterprises and Made in Italy (Mimit ex MiSe). Within this ILCs programme, six inter-laboratory comparisons were organized, including the ILC-2 which focused on activity measurements carried out with radionuclide calibrators commonly used in the nuclear medicine departments of the participants.
The focus was on three short-lived radionuclides - 99mTc, 18F, 177Lu - commonly employed in nuclear medicine for both diagnostic and therapeutic purposes. All presented results were compared with the reference values provided by ENEA-INMRI to ensure the traceability of measurements to the national primary activity standards. The observed deviation from the reference values of the measured activity were mainly within 10% (100% for 18F, 91.7% for 99mTc, 100% for 177Lu). The En statistical estimator was used to assess the participants’ ability to estimate uncertainty in the provided activity values. The obtained values revealed that, in certain instances, the involved laboratories did not achieve the correct results for En (with failure rates of 22.7%, 16.7%, 12.5% for 18F, 99mTc, 177Lu, respectively), despite deviations from the reference values falling within the 10%. The aim of ILC-2 was to harmonize the activity measurements in the country within the field of nuclear medicine for the specific radionuclides studied and enhance the measurement capabilities of the participants.
期刊介绍:
Applied Radiation and Isotopes provides a high quality medium for the publication of substantial, original and scientific and technological papers on the development and peaceful application of nuclear, radiation and radionuclide techniques in chemistry, physics, biochemistry, biology, medicine, security, engineering and in the earth, planetary and environmental sciences, all including dosimetry. Nuclear techniques are defined in the broadest sense and both experimental and theoretical papers are welcome. They include the development and use of α- and β-particles, X-rays and γ-rays, neutrons and other nuclear particles and radiations from all sources, including radionuclides, synchrotron sources, cyclotrons and reactors and from the natural environment.
The journal aims to publish papers with significance to an international audience, containing substantial novelty and scientific impact. The Editors reserve the rights to reject, with or without external review, papers that do not meet these criteria.
Papers dealing with radiation processing, i.e., where radiation is used to bring about a biological, chemical or physical change in a material, should be directed to our sister journal Radiation Physics and Chemistry.