BSS: Specific Requirements for Medical Exposures
Transcript of BSS: Specific Requirements for Medical Exposures
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BSS: Specific Requirements for
Medical Exposures
2nd Regional Workshop on the Implementation of the International BSS
28th October- 1st November 2013; Manila, Philippines
Maria del Rosario Pérez
Department of Public Health and Environment
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Justification
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The paradigm: science, recommendations, standards
Scientific basis Effects, risks,
sources, levels, trends, …
Recommendations System of RP (philosophy,
principles, dose criteria, …)
Standards (safety requirements,
regulatory language,..)
Medical settings
Implementation of
the standards
Safety guides, technical reports, tools
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BSS WS Manila 28th October to 1st November 2013
Justification of medical exposures Evolution of ICRP recommendations
Should be dealt with in the same way as justification of any other practice
But adds that each procedure is subject to a separate decision, so that there is an opportunity to apply a further, case-by-case, justification for each procedure. Notes that this may be important for complex investigations and for therapy.
1990 – ICRP 60
2007 – ICRP 103
– ICRP 105
1996 – ICRP 73
2011/2 – New BSS
A more complex approach - 3 levels
•Justification of a practice
•Generic justification of a defined procedure
•Justification for an individual patient
ICRP 73 approach is maintained – medical exposure
different and more detailed of patients calls for a
approach to the process of justification
1996 – BSS 115
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Justification in the BSS: the "what" and the "who"
In its chapter 1, the new BSS note that the
general safety requirement on justification
needs a special approach when it applies for
medical exposures. In chapter 3, the
requirement 37 focuses on justification of
medical exposures.
Three levels:
– General/overarching justification of the use of
ionizing radiation in medicine (level 1);
– Justification for a generic clinical condition (level 2);
– Justification of a radiological procedure for an
individual patient (level 3).
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What is the level 1 of justification?
The first level refers to the general
justification of the use of ionizing
radiation in medicine.
As a general approach, the use of
radiation in medicine is accepted as
doing more good than harm, economic
and social issues being considered.
Therefore, this first level of general
justification can be taken for granted.
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What is the level 2 of justification?
Second level -generic justification- refers to a
particular radiological medical procedure for
patients with a given clinical condition, or for a
group of individuals at risk to a given condition
that can be detected and treated.
This generic justification is assigned to the
health authority in conjunction with appropriate
professional bodies. It shall be reviewed from
time to time, with account taken of advances in
knowledge and technology developments.
Referral guidelines/ appropriateness criteria
reflect this level of justification.
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The level 3 : individual justification
Third level- individual justification of a
procedure judged to do more good than harm to
a particular patient.
It is assigned to health professionals involved in
the patient's care ("consultation between the
radiological medical practitioner and the
referring medical practitioner, as appropriate").
They have to integrate the best available
scientific evidence with their individual clinical
expertise to decide what is appropriate for that
individual patient,
RISKS
BENEFITS
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The BSS say that account has to be taken of:
– The appropriateness of the request;
– The urgency of the procedure;
– The characteristic of the medical exposure;
– The characteristic of the individual patient;
– Relevant information from the patient's previous radiological
procedures
– Particular attention: children, pregnancy and beast-feeding.
Relevant national or international referral guidelines shall be
taken into account (evidence-based decision-support tools).This
relies on professional judgment considering, inter alia, patient
values, local expertise, and availability of resources.
The level 3 : individual justification (cont.)
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Roles and responsibilities in
justifying at level 3? Two roles identified in the new BSS
– Radiological medical practitioner
– Referring medical practitioner
The BSS say that justification of
medical exposure for an individual
patient "shall be carried out through
consultation between the radiological
medical practitioner and the referring
medical practitioner, as appropriate"
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Justification- Respective Roles
Respective roles of the referring and the radiological
medical practitioner
– Who is responsible?
• Clinical context, medical history
• Knowledge about procedure – benefits, risks
• Responsibilities under a RP framework
• Potential financial conflict of interest
• Defensive medicine
• “Request for consultation” versus “instruction to perform”
• Referral criteria / criteria of appropriateness
– Practicalities
• Feasibility in busy imaging facilities?
• Modalities of consultation ?
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JUSTIFICACION
BENEFITS
RISKS
RISKS
BENEFITS
Asymptomatic
individuals
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Population screening vs. Individual Health
Assessment (IHA)
IHA is neither diagnosis nor screening. Presumptive
diagnosis of disease is based on signs/symptoms vs.
"possible disease" is based on individual risk factors.
Evidence-based referral guidelines and
appropriateness criteria for medical imaging assist
decision making about the best imaging procedure for
a patient with a given clinical condition.
Consensus about criteria for medical imaging of
asymptomatic people for IHA does not exist.
13
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BSS and asymptomatic individuals
Any radiological procedure on an
asymptomatic individual that is intended
to be performed for the early detection of
disease, but not as part of an approved
health screening programme, shall require
specific justification by the radiological
medical practitioner and the referring
medical practitioner.
The individual shall be informed of the
expected benefits, risks and limitations (e.g.
heart CT, lung CT, colon CT, other/s …)
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BSS: other specific justification requirements
Volunteers as part of a research
programme;
Female patients of reproductive
capacity
Breastfeeding and nuclear medicine
Radiological audits and critical review
of the implementation of the
justification principle.
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Biomedical research
–Justification of medical exposures
in biomedical research
• Helsinki Declaration
• Guidelines of the Council for
International Organizations of
Medical Sciences
• Recommendations of the ICRP
• Approved by ethics committee or
equivalent
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Issues on Justification of medical
exposures – (1)
– Awareness of radiation risks and hence the actual
need for justification
• Regulations may require justification
– But little is actually happening
• Regulatory body needs to promote awareness/guidance?
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– Appropriateness
• Joint responsibility
– The referring medical practitioner (benefits?)
– The radiological medical practitioner (risks?)
• Development and use of appropriateness criteria
– Professional bodies
• Availability of relevant information from the patient’s
previous radiological procedures
– The regulatory body as a facilitator?
Issues on Justification of medical exposures – (2)
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– Inspection/Audit
• What can the regulatory body do in this area?
– Medical domain versus radiation protection
• What should the regulatory body look for during its
inspections?
– Regulatory body needs specialized/trained inspectors in
this area?
Issues on Justification of medical exposures – (3)
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– Asymptomatic individuals
• “Worried well”
• Pressures from advertising, media
• Fragmented health systems
• Lack of continued health care
Issues on Justification of medical exposures – (4)
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– Biomedical research projects
– Regulatory bodies need to ensure there is a system
in place so that ethics committees (or equivalent) are
able to make a decision on the “justification of the
use of radiation” in the proposed project
• Dose & risk assessment
• Application of dose constraints
Issues on Justification of medical exposures – (5)
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Optimization
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Old vs. new BSS – optimization in
medical exposures
Old BSS
– Optimization biggest sub-section
– A mixture of requirements and guidance
• Much technical detail
New BSS
– Same headings as in BSS 115 retained
– Only requirements (the "what")
– Guidance and detail (the "how") removed
• To go into the companion Safety Guide (under development,
cosponsored by IAEA, PAHO and WHO)
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BSS over-arching requirement on
optimization
Registrants and licensees and radiological medical
practitioners shall ensure that protection and safety is
optimized for each medical exposure
Components to consider: Design considerations
Operational considerations
Calibration
Patient dosimetry
DRLs
QA
Dose constraints
Requirement 38: Optimization of protection & safety
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Design considerations
Registrants and licensees, in cooperation with
suppliers, to ensure that:
– Medical radiological equipment, and
– Software that could influence the delivery of
medical exposure,
Is used only if it conforms to applicable standards
– Including: radiation generators,
cassettes/screens, gamma cameras, image
intensifiers, flat panel detectors, etc.
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Operational considerations - 1
For diagnostic radiological procedures and image guided interventional procedures:
– The radiological medical practitioner, in cooperation with the medical radiation technologist and the medical physicist (and if appropriate with the radiopharmacist), must ensure that the following are used:
• Appropriate medical radiological equipment and software, and
• Appropriate radiopharmaceuticals (for nuclear medicine)
• Appropriate techniques and parameters to deliver a patient exposure that is the minimum necessary to fulfil the clinical purpose of the procedure taking into account
– relevant norms of acceptable image quality, and
– relevant diagnostic reference levels
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– To ensure:
• proper collimation of the primary X Ray beam to
minimize the volume of patient tissue being irradiated
and to improve image quality
• appropriate values of operational parameters (kVp,
mA…)
• appropriate image storage techniques in dynamic
imaging (number of images per second)
• adequate image processing factors (chemicals,
developer temperature, …)
Operational considerations - 2
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Operational considerations - 3
To ensure that the particular aspects of medical exposures
are considered in the optimization process for:
– Paediatric patients
– Individuals exposed as part of a health screening programme
– Volunteers exposed as part of a programme of biomedical
research
– Relatively high doses to the patient
– Exposure of the embryo/foetus, especially if abdomen or pelvis
is exposed to the useful beam or if significant dose
– Exposure of a breast-fed infant following a procedure with
radiopharmaceuticals
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Calibration
The medical physicist must ensure:
– All sources giving rise to medical exposures
• Calibrated – appropriate quantities and protocols
– Calibrations carried out
• At commissioning prior to clinical use
• After maintenance that could affect dosimetry
• Intervals approved by the Regulatory Body
– Calibration of all dosimeters used for dosimetry of
patients and for the calibration of sources is traceable to
a standards dosimetry laboratory
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Patients Dosimetry
Licensees must ensure that dosimetry of patients is
performed and documented:
– By or under the supervision of a medical physicist
– Using calibrated dosimeters
– Following internationally or nationally accepted protocols
– To determine:
• For diagnostic medical exposures
– Typical doses to patients for common procedures
• For image guided interventional procedures
– Typical doses to patients
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Diagnostic reference levels (DRLs)
Licensees must ensure that:
– Local assessments are made at approved intervals for
those radiological procedures for which DRLs have been
established
– A review of the optimization of patient protection is
conducted to determine whether corrective action is
needed for a given procedure if the typical doses
• Exceed the relevant DRL; or
• Fall substantially below the DRL and the exposures
are not providing useful diagnostic information or do
not yield the expected medical benefit to the patient
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DRL2
The initial DRLs are chosen as a percentile point on the observed distribution of
doses to patients (e.g. percentile 75). The values are selected by professional
bodies in conjunction with the health authority and the regulatory body, and
reviewed at intervals that represent a compromise between the necessary
stability and the long-term changes in dose distributions.
Diagnostic Reference Levels
DRL1
Number of
procedures
dose
75 %
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Trends in DRLs with time
UK has > 20 years of experience with DRLs
– Reviews in 1995, 2000 and 2005
– 2005 review showed for radiography:
• On average about 16% lower than 2000 review
• Typically less than 50% of original DRLs
HPA-RPD-029, Health Protection Agency, UK, 2007
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Quality assurance for medical exposures -1
Licensees must ensure a comprehensive
programme of QA for medical exposures
– Active participation of
• Medical physicists
• Radiological medical practitioners
• Medical radiation technologists
– Taking into account principles established by:
• WHO
• PAHO
• Professional bodies
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Quality assurance for medical exposures -2
To ensure the QA programme includes, as
appropriate to the facility:
– Measurements by, or under the oversight of, a medical
physicist of the physical parameters of medical
radiological equipment:
• At acceptance & commissioning, prior to clinical use on patients
• Periodically, thereafter, and
• After any major maintenance that could affect patient safety
• After any installation of new software or modification of existing software that
could affect protection and safety of patients
– Corrective actions, regular independent audits.
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Dose constraints in the BSS
In medical exposures, dose
constraints only apply for:
– Carers & comforters (persons, other than
workers, who assist in the care, support
or comfort of exposed patients).
– Volunteers in a programme of biomedical
research
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Multidisciplinary team working to prevent
unnecessary/unintended exposures: the example of medical imaging
Gate keeper
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QA / Error reduction
Justification Optimization
Patient journey
(adapted from Dr. L. Lau IRQN/ISR)
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Optimization of protection – issues
This is an area where much can be achieved
– Many tools available
– But “coordination” is needed
• Calibration, dosimetry, DRLs, QA
• Operational aspects
• So that protection is optimized for each exposure
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•Implementation of the “consultation requirement”? Roles
of the health authorities and health professional bodies
•Good strategy to start with justification for “sensitive”
groups?
•Regulatory Body roles: promoting of awareness,
facilitating for the development of referral criteria,
encouraging hospitals to implement electronic
solutions?
•Involvement of a medical physicist depending on
complexity/risks. RB approach?
•How to ensure measurement/records of typical doses?
Discussion Topics
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Acknowledgements
Presentation delivered by Maria del Rosario Pérez,
Radiation Programme, Department of Public Health and
Environment (PHE), World Health Organization (WHO).
It includes material developed in collaboration with, or
adapted from John Le Heron, Division of Radiation,
Transport and Waste Safety (NSRW), International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) and Pablo Jimenez, Regional
Advisor in Radiological Health, Health Systems based on
Primary Health Care (HSS), Pan American Health
Organization (PAHO).
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Collaboration to support BSS implementation in the medical
sector and enhance radiation safety and quality in healthcare