| Literature DB >> 32435834 |
Werner Jaschke1, Gabriel Bartal2, Colin J Martin3, Eliseo Vano4.
Abstract
Over recent years, an increasing number of fluoroscopically guided interventions (FGIs) have been performed by radiologists and non-radiologists. Also, the number of complex interventional procedures has increased. In the late nineties, first reports of skin injuries appeared in the literature. The medical community responded through increased awareness for radiation protection and public authorities by recommendations and legislation, for example, the European Basic Safety Standards (EU-BSS) which were published in 2014, or the international Basic Safety Standards (BSS). Implementation of the EU-BSS requires concerted action from interventionalists, radiographers, medical physics experts and competent national authorities. Interventionalists should play an important role in this project since implementation of the EU-BSS will affect their daily practice. This paper discusses some important issues of the EU-BSS such as unintended and accidental radiation exposures of patients, the meaning of significant dose events and how to deal with patients who were exposed to a substantial radiation dose with the risk of tissue injuries. In addition, this paper provides practical advice on how to implement alert and trigger levels in daily practice of FGIs in order to increase patient safety.Entities:
Keywords: European basic safety standards; Substantial radiation dose; Trigger levels
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32435834 PMCID: PMC7369256 DOI: 10.1007/s00270-020-02517-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol ISSN: 0174-1551 Impact factor: 2.740
Procedures with a potentially high dose of patients
| 1 | Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic stent shunt (TIPSS) |
| 2 | Percutaneous biliary drainage/ stenting ± biopsy, stone removal, rendezvous maneuver |
| 3 | Hepatic chemoembolization/ abdominal arterial embolization |
| 4 | Pelvic arterial embolization |
| 5 | Thoracic and/ or abdominal EVAR |
| 6 | Neuroembolization/head (arteriovenous malformation [AVM], aneurysm, tumor) |
| 7 | Neuroembolization/spine (AVM, aneurysm, tumor) |
| 8 | Mechanical thrombectomy (stroke) |
| 9 | Selective internal radiation therapy (SIRT/Y-90 radioembolization) |
| 10 | Transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) |
| 11 | Percutaneous coronary interventions (Coronary stenting, ablation, etc.) |
| 12 | Percutaneous vertebroplasty and kyphoplasty |
Trigger levelsa according to CIRSE Guidelines [11]
| Dose metric | Trigger valueb |
|---|---|
| Peak skin dose ( | 3 Gy |
| Cumulative air kerma at a reference point ( | 5 Gy |
| Air kerma area product ( | 500 Gy cm2 |
| Fluoroscopy time (only if PSD, | 60 min |
aThe radiation dose level that is intended to trigger follow-up for an FGI procedure, in order to ensure detection of any clinically relevant injury in an average patient
bThese criteria apply to radiation dose values at the end of a procedure
cFacilities performing potentially high-dose FGI procedures shall measure dose metrics and should not rely on fluoroscopy time alone
SAFRAD reporting criteria [32] 1 and 5 should only be used if 2 and 3 are not available!
| Fluoroscopy time | > 60 min |
Air kerma area product (or dose area product) | For cardiac and neurological procedures: > 300 Gy.cm2 or 30,000 cGy.cm2 or 30,000 µGy.m2 or 300,000 mGy.cm2 For other procedures: > 500 Gy.cm2 or 50,000 cGy.cm2 or 50,000 µGy.m2 or 500,000 mGy.cm2 |
| Cumulative air kerma (dose) at the interventional reference point | > 5 Gy or 5000 mGy |
| Measure peak skin dose | > 3 Gy or > 3000 mGy |
| Number of cine acquisition series | > 20 |
| Observed radiation injury | |
| Patient had multiple procedures within the last 12 months | |
| Wrong procedure performed | |
| Procedure performed on the wrong patient | |
| Unknown pregnancy at time of procedure | |
Threshold values of measurable dose quantities for which there are risks of skin effects following IR procedures
| Peak skin dose (Gy) | Risk of tissue reaction | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2–3 | 3–8 | 150–300 | 2–5 | Tissue reactions unlikely to occur |
| 3–5 | 5–12 | 300–800 | 3–8 | Small risk of transient erythema and epilation. Recovery from hair loss |
| 5–8 | 8–20 | 400–1200 | 5–12 | Risk of erythema and epilation in some patients. Effects may appear within 2–8 weeks Erythema may be prolonged |
| 8–12 | 12–30 | 600–2000 | 8–16 | Transient erythema expected as a prompt effect. Skin desquamation, prolonged epilation |
Note: threshold values are different for cumulative air kerma (Ka,r) and air kerma area product (PKA) for FGIs in the body and head, but peak skin dose levels are identical!