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Managing Radiation Dose: IHE REM Profile

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Presentation on theme: "Managing Radiation Dose: IHE REM Profile"— Presentation transcript:

1 Managing Radiation Dose: IHE REM Profile
Kevin O’Donnell Toshiba Medical Systems Co-chair, IHE Radiology Planning Cmte Member, DICOM Standards Cmte & WG-6 Member, MITA X-Ray Section

2 Motivation X-Ray based imaging can provide tremendously useful information Patient Dose is an important consideration Potential benefit > potential risk … but the risk should still be managed

3 Why Measure / Monitor “I think patient dose is improving.” “I think it’s getting worse.” Managing in the presence of data is far better and easier than managing in its absence. – Robert Glass

4 Why Measure / Monitor Technology is constantly changing
Technique is constantly evolving Understanding continues to improve Rules of thumb and gut understanding are unstable in the face of current rapid changes that affect dose, sometimes counter-intuitively. Our understanding of the health effects of radiation is still incomplete and continues to improve.

5 Why Measure / Monitor ALARA Guidelines for Physicians
(Patient Dose) As Low As Reasonably Achievable Patient Dose < = Reasonably Achievable Dose A < = B Should be easy / automatic / routine Can we make the data readily available… Physicians are asked to follow guidelines, like constraining their patients dose to As Low As Reasonably Achievable (ALARA), but they can be frustrated by the fact that it's difficult to see what a given patient's dose actually was, and almost impossible to assemble comparison values as to what is reasonably achievable. How do you see A at your site. Where you get B (keeping in mind the moving targets) Do you collect numbers? Is it easy?

6 … A New IHE Profile What’s an IHE Profile?

7 IHE in One Slide IHE helps vendors implement & test functions that span multiple systems Profiles are implementation guides how to use existing standards to address a specific problem scenario Connectathons are test events managed testing of Profile implementations IHE helps users purchase & integrate multi-system solutions list required IHE Profile support in RFPs

8 IHE Connectathon One Week; 70+ vendors; 350+ engineers;
Thousands of tests; Managed process; Find & resolve issues. The outcome is vendor products with working implementations of IHE Profiles like REM

9 IHE Radiation Exposure Monitoring Profile
National Registry some text: # Numerical Details some text: # Numerical Details Numer some text: # Numerical Details some text: # Numerical Details some text: # Numerical Details some text: # Numerical Details Over Target: 12.2% Performing Phys. Outlier: # Over Target: 12.2% Performing Phys. Outlier: # some text: # Numerical Details some text: # Numerical Details some text: # Numerical Details Over Target: 12.2% Performing Phys. Outlier: # Dose Analysis & Reporting Archive some text: # Numerical Details

10 A New IHE Profile IHE Radiation Exposure Monitoring Profile
Integration of systems reporting dose and systems which receive, store, or process those reports Modalities, PACS, RIS, Workstations, Registries Facilitate compliance with Euratom 97/43, ACR Guidelines, etc. Directly based on DICOM Dose Reports Creation, Collection, Distribution, Processing Facilitate vendor implementation and hospital deployment of this useful new mechanism for tracking radiology dose in your institution.

11 DICOM Dose Reports “SR Objects” – DICOM Structured Reports
Easily ingested (and regurgitated) by PACS Granularity : “Irradiation Event” + Accumulated Dose over Study, Series Templates: CT, Projection X-Ray (Mammo, Fluoro) Not addressed: NM, RT

12 What about using MPPS? Modality Performed Procedure Steps
Status messages back to RIS / PACS Transient Information designed for workflow; not persistent archiving Lacks complete dose details

13 What about Image Headers?
Mostly Exposure details (for interpretation) No image; no dose deleted due to quality / patient motion More images; more dose extra reconstructions; post-processing Lacks complete dose details

14 What To Measure So many choices… Solution:
Exposure, Dose, Dose Index, Estimated Dose, Effective Dose, Estimated Effective Dose, … CTDIw, CTDIvol, CTDI100, CTDIfreeair, … Solution: Collaborated with IEC Subcommittee 62B Established a baseline & a pipeline Upgrade when necessary

15 Key Measurements CT Dose Projection X-Ray Dose Mammography Dose
DLP, CTDIvol, kVP, mA, sec Effective Dose [ Optional ] (Reference estimation method) Projection X-Ray Dose DAP, kVP, mA, sec Fluoro Dose, Fluoro Time Mammography Dose AGD, Entrance RP, kVP, mA, sec Compression, Half Value Layer ftp://medical.nema.org/medical/dicom/2008/08_16pu.pdf ftp://medical.nema.org/medical/dicom/final/cp874_ft.pdf

16 Other Details in Dose SR
Full Patient / Order / Study Details Unique ID for each Irradiation Event Equipment ID Patient Position, Anatomy imaged Imaging Geometry (projection) Collimation X-Ray Filters, Anode Target Material Calibration, Phantom, Dosimeter

17 DICOM CP 874 Updated details for REM Implementers
Will apply to 2009 Connectathon Minor adjustments to DICOM templates Require identification of irradiating system Require Target Region Optional references to persons who ordered / performed Code to differentiate interventional procedures from diagnostic etc.

18 Creating SR Dose Reports
Modalities CT, XR, XA, MX “Readers” CR, DX, Film Digitizers 3rd Party Workstations RIS, PACS

19 Storing SR Dose Reports
Usually stored in the Study folder Archive, Backup, Reconciliation Query / Retrieve Can be sent to other destinations

20 Using SR Dose Reports Possible applications: Radiation QA
Periodically Query / Retrieve Reports from Archive Set policies/standards and flag deviations Set goals for improvement and track; Implement protocol changes and compare difference in dose Patient Impact Evaluation e.g. if Patient identified as pregnant post-facto Dose Mapping Store data in realtime from Modality to Mapping Workstation

21 Using SR Dose Reports National Registries Individual Dose Record
Anonymize and submit Dose Reports to Register Compile Population Risk Estimations Derive Dose Reference Levels Provide Site-Site Comparisons Individual Dose Record Collect Dose Reports over time Clinical Trials Collect Dose together with Images Demonstrate both improved detection & reduced dose

22 REM Profile: Actors & Transactions
Actor/Flow of IHE REM Profile

23 2009 Connectathon Participation
Vendors Planning to Test IHE REM Profile GE Siemens Toshiba Results will be posted: CMI Infimed Krucom

24 What to Ask For IHE DICOM Radiation Exposure Monitoring Profile (REM)
Check Product: IHE Integration Statement DICOM X-ray Radiation Dose SR Storage CT Radiation Dose Template, or Projection X-Ray Radiation Dose Template Check Product: DICOM Conformance Statement

25 Takeaway Start planning: IHE REM Profile
How will this support your Radiation Safety Plan IHE REM Profile

26 Questions ?

27 Timeline Nov. 2007 June 2008 Aug. 2008 Feb. 2009
DICOM CT Dose Reports published (DICOM Proj. X-Ray Dose Reports already published) June 2008 IHE REM Profile published Aug. 2008 Vendors sign up to test REM Implementations Feb. 2009 Connectathon Testing of REM Profile (Chicago) Results posted:

28 The IHE Process Users IHE Vendors Standards RFP IHE Integration
Real-World Integration Problems RFP (Profiles & Actors) Users Select IHE Profiles IHE Standards (DICOM, HL7, etc) IHE Integration Profiles IHE Technical Framework Results IHE Connectathons IHE Demonstrations Users and Vendors can be sure they are talking about the same thing because their RFPs and Integration Statements reference the detailed Technical Framework. IHE Integration Statement (Profiles & Actors) Vendors Product with IHE


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