| Literature DB >> 35294584 |
Eliseo Vano1, Reinhard Loose2, Guy Frija3, Graciano Paulo4, Efstathios Efstathopoulos5, Claudio Granata6, Riccardo Corridori7, Alberto Torresin8, Jonas S Andersson9, Virginia Tsapaki10, Josefin Ammon11, Christoph Hoeschen12.
Abstract
The terms "notifications" and "alerts" for medical exposures are used by several national and international organisations. Recommendations for CT scanners have been published by the American Association of Physicists in Medicine. Some interventional radiology societies as well as national authorities have also published dose notifications for fluoroscopy-guided interventional procedures. Notifications and alerts may also be useful for optimisation and to avoid unintended and accidental exposures. The main interest in using these values for high-dose procedures (CT and interventional) is to optimise imaging procedures, reducing the probability of stochastic effects and avoiding tissue reactions. Alerts in X-ray systems may be considered before procedures (as in CT), during procedures (in some interventional radiology systems), and after procedures, when the patient radiation dose results are known and processed. This review summarises the different uses of notifications and alerts to help in optimisation for CT and for fluoroscopy-guided interventional procedures as well as in the analysis of unintended and accidental medical exposures. The paper also includes cautions in setting the alert values and discusses the benefits of using patient dose management systems for the alerts, their registry and follow-up, and the differences between notifications, alerts, and trigger levels for individual procedures and the terms used for the collective approach, such as diagnostic reference levels. KEY POINTS: • Notifications and alerts on patient dose values for computed tomography (CT) and fluoroscopy-guided interventional procedures (FGIP) allow to improve radiation safety and contribute to the avoidance of radiation injuries and unintended and accidental exposures. • Alerts may be established before the imaging procedures (as in CT) or during and after the procedures as for FGIP. • Dose management systems should include notifications and alerts and their registry for the hospital quality programmes.Entities:
Keywords: Alert; Fluoroscopy-guided interventional procedures; Notification; Tomography, X-ray computed; Unintended exposures
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35294584 PMCID: PMC9279248 DOI: 10.1007/s00330-022-08675-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Radiol ISSN: 0938-7994 Impact factor: 7.034
Notification values recommended by the AAPM Working Group on Standardization of CT Nomenclature and Protocols [3]
| CT scan region | CTDIvol |
|---|---|
| Adult head | 80 |
| Adult torso | 50 |
| Pediatric head | |
| < 2 years old | 50 |
| 2–5 years old | 60 |
| Pediatric Torso | |
| < 10 years old (16-cm phantom) | 25 |
| < 10 years old (32-cm phantom) | 10 |
| Brain perfusion | |
| (examination that repeatedly scans the same anatomic level to measure the flow of contrast media through the anatomy) | 600 |
| Cardiac | |
| Retrospectively gated (spiral) | 150 |
| Prospectively gated (sequential) | 50 |
Summary of radiation monitoring dose notification thresholds [5]
| Parameter | First notification | Subsequent notifications |
|---|---|---|
| Peak skin dose (PSD) | 2000 mGy | 500 mGy |
| Reference point air kerma ( | 3000 mGy | 1000 mGy |
| Kerma area product ( | 300 Gy.cm2 (*) | 100 Gy.cm2 (*) |
| Fluoroscopy time (FT) | 30 min | 15 min |
(*) Assuming a 100 cm2 field at the patient’s skin. The value should be adjusted to the actual procedural field size
Definitions summary
| Notification value (usually used for CT) [ | A value of CTDI vol or DLP to trigger a notification when the value would likely be exceeded by the prescribed scans. The user is required to verify that the settings are correct or to change them. |
| Alert values (usually used for CT) [ | A value of CTDIvol or DLP used to trigger an alert when the system projects that the prescribed scans within an ongoing examination would result in a cumulative dose index value that exceeded the user-configured alert value. An alert value is associated with a complete examination protocol, not with individual scans. |
| Trigger level (for interventional fluoroscopy systems and for unintended exposures) [ | A “trigger level” is an appropriately selected reference value, usually of the cumulative air kerma ( |
| Diagnostic reference level (not for individual patients) [ | Used in medical imaging to indicate whether, in routine conditions, the amount of radiation used for a specified procedure is unusually high or low for that procedure. |