MEDIRAD aimed to enhance the scientific bases and clinical practice of radiation protection (RP) in the medical field and addressed the need to better understand and evaluate the health effects of low-dose ionising radiation (IR) exposure from diagnostic and therapeutic imaging and from off-target effects in radiotherapy (RT).
Key results include (1) image quality assessment tool, organ dosimetry calculation tool, imaging and dose repositories and guidance for dose evaluation and optimization in CT, fluoroscopy-guided procedures and nuclear medicine; (2) standardised quantitative I-131I imaging for dosimetry in thyroid cancer patients, freeware dosimetry tools for molecular therapy and recommendations for a large-scale epidemiological study; (3) development and validation of a prediction model to assess the risk of acute coronary events after RT in individual breast cancer patients based on 3D cardiac dose distributions (BRACE Study); identification and validation of the most important cardiac imaging and circulating biomarkers of radiation-induced cardiovascular changes after breast RT; development of preclinical models as well as different modelling approaches; (4) extended follow-up of major cohorts from the EPI-CT study of paediatric CT patients, implementation of a nested case-control study of brain and haematological malignancies and identification of potential biomarkers of susceptibility to low dose radiation induced cancer; (5) a set of consensus recommendations, based on MEDIRAD findings, developed in collaboration with a broad range of stakeholders, for the scientific and clinical communities as well as policy makers, to encourage professional/regulatory guidance, follow-up research activities and ensure that the MEDIRAD research findings and tools are taken up in clinical practice and thus benefit Europe’s patients.
To fulfil its objectives, the MEDIRAD project relied on a multi-disciplinary consortium involving 34 partners from 14 European countries.