| Literature DB >> 28497187 |
Werner Jaschke1, Matthias Schmuth2, Annalisa Trianni3, Gabriel Bartal4.
Abstract
For a long time, radiation-induced skin injuries were only encountered in patients undergoing radiation therapy. In diagnostic radiology, radiation exposures of patients causing skin injuries were extremely rare. The introduction of fast multislice CT scanners and fluoroscopically guided interventions (FGI) changed the situation. Both methods carry the risk of excessive high doses to the skin of patients resulting in skin injuries. In the early nineties, several reports of epilation and skin injuries following CT brain perfusion studies were published. During the same time, several papers reported skin injuries following FGI, especially after percutaneous coronary interventions and neuroembolisations. Thus, CT and FGI are of major concern regarding radiation safety since both methods can apply doses to patients exceeding 5 Gy (National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements threshold for substantial radiation dose level). This paper reviews the problem of skin injuries observed after FGI. Also, some practical advices are given how to effectively avoid skin injuries. In addition, guidelines are discussed how to deal with patients who were exposed to a potentially dangerous radiation skin dose during medically justified interventional procedures.Entities:
Keywords: Interventional radiology; Radiation; Skin injuries
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28497187 PMCID: PMC5489635 DOI: 10.1007/s00270-017-1674-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol ISSN: 0174-1551 Impact factor: 2.740
Radiation-induced lesions of the skin and eye lens with respect to dose and time of onset.
Adapted from ICRP publication 85/2000 [8]
| Effect | Approximate threshold | Time of onset |
|---|---|---|
| Skin | ||
| Early transient erythema | 2 | 2–24 h |
| Main erythema reaction | 6 | ~1.5 weeks |
| Temporary epilation | 3 | ~3 weeks |
| Permanent epilation | 7 | ~3 weeks |
| Dry desquamation | 14 | ~4 weeks |
| Moist desquamation | 18 | ~4 weeks |
| Secondary ulceration | 24 | >6 weeks |
| Late erythema | 15 | 8–10 weeks |
| Ischemic dermal necrosis | 18 | >10 weeks |
| Dermal atrophy (1st phase) | 10 | >52 weeks |
| Telangiectasis | 10 | >52 weeks |
| Dermal necrosis (delayed) | >12 | >52 weeks |
| Skin cancer | Unknown | >15 years |
Substantial radiation dose levels which should trigger follow-up of patients in order to detect clinically relevant skin reactions.
Adapted from NCRP report Nr 168 (2010)
| Peak skin dose | 3 Gy |
| Cumulative air KERMA at RP | 5 Gy |
| Kerma area product | 500 Gy cm2 |
| Fluoroscopy time | 60 mina |
NCRP National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements, Bethesda, USA
a Institutions performing procedures with potentially high dose levels shall measure and record dose metrics, and shall not rely on fluoroscopy time alone
Fig. 1Number of patients in Denmark having one or more X-ray examinations in 2004 as a function of age and sex
(adapted from [18])
Fig. 2Age distribution of patients in Denmark undergoing FGI procedures
Cutaneous radiation injury: grading, threshold dose and timing
| Grade | Skin dosea | Prodromal stage | Latent stage | Manifest illness stage | Third wave of erythemab | Recovery | Late effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | >2 Gy | 1–2 days post-exposure or not seen | No injury evident for 2–5 weeks post-exposured | 2–5 weeks post-exposure, lasting 20–30 days: redness of skin, slight edema, possible increased pigmentation | Not seen | Complete healing expected 28–40 days after dry desquamation (3–6 months post-exposure) | Possible slight skin atrophy |
| II | >15 Gy (1500 rad) | 6–24 h post-exposure with immediate sensation of heat lasting 1–2 days | No injury evident for 1–3 weeks post-exposure | 1–3 weeks post-exposure; redness of skin, sense of heat, edema, skin may turn brown | 10–16 weeks post-exposure, injury of blood, vessels, edema and increasing pain | Healing depends on size of injury and the possibility of more cycles of erythema | Possible skin atrophy or ulcer recurrence |
Dose range is given for patients with normal radiosensitivities in the absence of mitigating or aggravating physical or clinical factors. Response to radiation does not apply to the skin of the scalp. Threshold dose and timing are not absolute values, but rather the best appraisal values. Signs and symptoms are expected to appear earlier as skin dose increases
Taken from: Cutaneous radiation injury: factsheet for physicians. CDC Stacks/Center of Disease Control and Prevention, USA; https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/23969 [26]
a Absorbed dose to at least 10 cm2 of the basal cell layer of the skin
b Especially with beta exposure
c The Gray (Gy) is a unit of absorbed dose and reflects an amount of energy deposited in a mass of tissue (1 Gy = 100 rad)
d Skin of the face, chest and neck will have a shorter latent phase than the skin of the palms of the hands and the skin of the feet
Genetic disorders increasing radiosensitivity [21, 34]
| Ataxia teleangiectatica |
| ATM-like disorder |
| Nijmegen breakage syndrome |
| Severe combined immune deficiency (SCID) |
| Ligase IV syndrome |
| Seckel syndrome |
| Fanconi anemia |
| Bloom syndrome |
| Gorlin syndrome |
| Familiar polyposis |
| Gardner syndrome |
| Hereditary melanoma |
| Dysplastic nervus syndrome |
| Xeroderma pigmentosum variant |
Drugs increasing radiosensitivity [14, 20–22, 34, 35]
| Actinomycin D |
| Doxorubicin |
| Bleomycin |
| 5-FU |
| Methotrexat |
| NNRTI-based antiretroviral therapy in HIV patients |
| Platinum containing chemotherapeutic drugs |
| Antiangiogenic drugs |
| BRAF inhibitors and others |
General advice to be provided to patients and treating physicians
| 0–2 Gy | No need to inform patient, because there should be no visible effects |
| 2–5 Gy | Advise patient that erythema may be observed but should fade with time |
| 5–0 Gy | Advise patient to perform self-examination or ask a partner to examine for skin effects (erythema, itching) from about 2 to 10 weeks after the procedure |
| 10–15 Gy | Medical follow-up is appropriate; skin effects may be prolonged, pain and necrosis may occur |
| >15 Gy | Medical follow-up is essential: radiation-induced wound may progress to ulceration and necrosis |
Important steps to minimize patient dose and to avoid radiation-induced skin injuries
| Keep image receptor as close as possible to the patient |
| Maximize distance between patient and X-ray tube |
| Adapt tube settings (tube current, focal spot, filtration, exposure time and tube voltage) to patient size (usually done by automatic exposure control) |
| Use pulsed fluoroscopy, reduce frame rate and/or dose whenever possible |
| Use collimation, preferably virtual (off fluoroscopy) |
| Avoid direct magnification |
| Avoid angled views (remember that only 3 cm increase in body diameter doubles the skin dose) |
| Use road map or stored fluoroscopy loops instead of runs |
| Use last image hold instead of single shot |
| Avoid unnecessary cone beam CT, long fluoroscopy and multiple runs |
| Change beam entrance fields in long procedures if possible |
| Reduce to the minimum overlapping beam entrance fields in sequential FGI |