In:
CVIR Endovascular, Springer Science and Business Media LLC, Vol. 3, No. 1 ( 2020-12)
Abstract:
To quantify and categorize fluoroscopically-guided procedures with radiation doses exceeding 5000 mGy reference point air kerma (K a,r ). K a,r 〉 5000 mGy has been defined as a “significant radiation dose” by the Society of Interventional Radiology . Identification and analysis of interventions with high radiation doses has the potential to reduce radiation-induced injuries. Materials and methods Radiation dose data from a dose monitoring system for 19 interventional suites and 89,549 consecutive patient encounters from January 1, 2013 to August 1, 2019 at a single academic institution were reviewed. All patient encounters with K a,r 〉 5000 mGy were included. All other encounters were excluded ( n = 89,289). Patient demographics, medical specialty, intervention type, fluoroscopy time (minutes), dose area product (mGy·cm 2 ), and K a,r (mGy) were evaluated. Results There were 260 (0.3%) fluoroscopically-guided procedures with K a,r 〉 5000 mGy. Of the 260 procedures which exceeded 5000 mGy, neurosurgery performed 81 (30.5%) procedures, followed by interventional radiology ( n = 75; 28.2%), neurointerventional radiology ( n = 55; 20.7%), and vascular surgery ( n = 49; 18.4%). The procedures associated with the highest K a,r were venous stent reconstruction performed by interventional radiology, arteriovenous malformation embolization performed by neurointerventional radiology, spinal hardware fixation by neurosurgery, and arterial interventions performed by vascular surgery. Neurointerventional radiology had the highest mean K a,r (7,799 mGy), followed by neurosurgery (7452 mGy), vascular surgery (6849 mGy), and interventional radiology (6109 mGy). The mean K a,r for interventional radiology performed procedures exceeding 5000 mGy was significantly lower than that for neurointerventional radiology, neurosurgery, and vascular surgery. Conclusions Fluoroscopically-guided procedures with radiation dose exceeding 5000 mGy reference point air kerma are uncommon. The results of this study demonstrate that a large proportion of cases exceeding 5000 mGy were performed by non-radiologists, who likely do not receive the same training in radiation physics, radiation biology, and dose reduction techniques as radiologists.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
2520-8934
DOI:
10.1186/s42155-020-00159-6
Language:
English
Publisher:
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Publication Date:
2020
detail.hit.zdb_id:
2934084-6