Reducing Radiation Exposure in Cardiac Catheterizations for Congenital Heart Disease

被引:0
作者
Chandni Patel
Matthew Grossman
Veronika Shabanova
Jeremy Asnes
机构
[1] Yale School of Medicine,Pediatric Cardiology
[2] Yale School of Medicine,Pediatrics
[3] Yale University,Department of Pediatrics
来源
Pediatric Cardiology | 2019年 / 40卷
关键词
Radiation exposure; Pediatric catheterization; Congenital heart disease;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Ionizing radiation exposure is a necessary risk entailed during congenital cardiac catheterizations. The congenital catheterization lab at Yale New Haven Children’s Hospital employed quality improvement strategies to minimize radiation exposure in this vulnerable population. In two phases, we implemented six interventions, which included adding and utilizing lower fluoroscopy and digital angiography (DA) doses, increasing staff and physician radiation awareness, focusing on tighter collimation, and changing the default fluoroscopy and DA doses to lower settings. Post-intervention data were collected prospectively for all procedures in the congenital catheterization lab and compared to pre-intervention radiation data collected retrospectively. Radiation exposure was measured in total air kerma (mGy), dose area product per body weight (DAP/kg) (µGy m2/kg), and fluoroscopy time (min). Data were collected for a total of 312 cases. In considering all procedures, the DAP/kg decreased by 67.6% and air kerma decreased by 63%. Fluoroscopy time did not change over the study period. Significant decreases in radiation exposure (DAP/kg) by procedure type were seen for atrial septal defect, patent ductus arteriosus, and transcatheter pulmonary valve procedures with a 45%, 42% and 83% decrease, respectively. Air kerma decreased significantly for ASD and PDA procedures with an 80% and 72% decrease, respectively. When compared to national benchmarks, the median DAP/kg and air kerma for these procedures are lower at our institution. The decreases continue to be sustained 2 years post-interventions. Systems-based interventions can be readily implemented in the congenital cardiac catheterization lab with dramatic and sustainable radiation dose reduction for patients.
引用
收藏
页码:638 / 649
页数:11
相关论文
共 73 条
[1]  
Justino H(2006)The ALARA concept in pediatric cardiac catheterization: techniques and tactics for managing radiation dose Pediatr Radiol 36 146-153
[2]  
Hill KD(2017)Impact of imaging approach on radiation dose and associated cancer risk in children undergoing cardiac catheterization Catheter Cardiovasc Interv 89 888-897
[3]  
Wang C(2014)Standardizing radiation dose reporting in the pediatric cardiac catheterization laboratory—a multicenter study by the CCISC (congenital cardiovascular interventional study consortium) Catheter Cardiovasc Interv 84 786-793
[4]  
Einstein AJ(2010)Radiation dose to the pediatric cardiac catheterization and intervention patient Am J Roentgenol 195 1175-1179
[5]  
Kobayashi D(2007)Diagnostic reference levels and effective dose in paediatric cardiac catheterization Br J Radiol 80 177-185
[6]  
Meadows J(2016)Patient radiation doses in paediatric interventional cardiology procedures: a review J Radiol Prot 36 R131-R144
[7]  
Forbes TJ(2014)Radiation dose benchmarks during cardiac catheterization for congenital heart disease in the United States JACC 7 1060-1069
[8]  
Chida K(2005)Patient-specific dose and radiation risk estimation in pediatric cardiac catheterization Circulation 111 83-89
[9]  
Ohno T(2018)Exposure to low-dose ionizing radiation from cardiac procedures and malignancy risk in adults with congenital heart disease Circulation 137 1334-1345
[10]  
Kakizaki S(2017)Radiation safety in children with congenital and acquired heart disease: a scientific position statement on multimodality dose optimization from the image gently alliance JACC Cardiovasc Imaging 10 797-818