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Safeguards Added to Radiation Equipment

August 18, 2009

The NIH Clinical Center has taken further steps to safeguard clinical research patients who are exposed to radiation during certain imaging tests.


Computed tomography (CT) and positron emission tomography (PET)/CT equipment purchased by the Clinical Center will now be required to routinely record radiation dose exposure in a patient's hospital-based electronic medical record.

"When a hospital or clinic patient receives a medication or a treatment, it is routinely recorded in the patient's medical record," says John Gallin. "The Clinical Center's approach is an important first step in making it possible to more easily document and track information about a patient's exposure to radiation."

Today, electronic radiology information systems in hospitals generally do not collect or report radiation exposures. "CT and PET/ CT scanners do not currently forward data on radiation dose to our radiology information systems," says David Bluemke.

The risk of exposure to low doses of medical radiation from diagnostic medical-imaging tests isn't known, but very high radiation doses have the potential to cause cancer. The ability to keep track of an individual's exposure to radiation through routine imaging tests is needed so that researchers can begin to determine if these exposures pose a health risk.

"The National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements reported recently that Americans received seven times more radiation exposure from medical tests in 2006 than was the case in the 1980s," says Ronald Neumann. "CT and cardiac nuclear medicine studies accounted for much of this increased medical radiation exposure."

Ultimately, radiation dosage could become a standard element of a universal electronic medical record used to assess radiation risk from life-long medical testing, the Clinical Center radiologists say.

"The NIH Clinical Center also will require that newly purchased equipment allows patients to record their radiation dose exposure in their own personal health record," Bluemke adds.

Online resources to help individuals organize their health information as a personal medical record are becoming more prevalent. Currently, patients can easily receive their diagnostic imaging studies records on CD-ROM, Bluemke says.

The NIH Clinical Center's imaging program will work with vendors who supply Clinical Center imaging equipment to develop software tools to extract the examination type, date, and radiation dose exposure from the CD-ROM, for uploading to a personal health record.

Source: NIH


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