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A Guide to Justification for Clinical Radiologists
Ref No : BFCR(00)5
The Royal College of Radiologists
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Citation details:
Board of the Faculty of Clinical Radiology
The Royal College of Radiologists (2000)
A Guide to Justification for Clinical Radiologists
Royal College of Radiologists, London.
ISBN 1 872599 64 8
RCR Ref No BFCR(00)5
ŠThe Royal College of Radiologists, August 2000
This Publication is Copyright under the Berne Convention and the
International Copyright Convention.
All rights reserved.
This booklet was prepared and published on behalf of the Royal
College of Radiologists (RCR). Whilst every attempt has been made to
provide accurate and useful information, neither the RCR, the
members and Fellows of the RCR or other persons contributing to the
formation of the booklet make any warranty, express or implied, with
regard to accuracy, omissions and usefulness of the information
contained herein. Furthermore, the same parties do not assume any
liability with respect to the use, or subsequent damages resulting
from the use of the information contained in the booklet.
Contents
Foreword
1 Introduction
2 Critical roles and responsibilities
in justification of individual exposures
3 The process of justification
4 Guidelines
References
Foreword
The new Ionising Radiation Regulations place specified
responsibilities on organisations and individuals involved in the
process of undertaking an investigation involving exposure to
ionising radiation. It is vitally important that all those in
departments of clinical radiology understand those responsibilities
and their implications and have agreed the responsibilities of the
respective duty holders.
This document does not represent a statement of College policy, it
provides an explanation about the regulations to assist members and
Fellows in defining local policies and practices to provide an
effective and appropriate service in the context of the legislation.
The text outlines the position of the employer, defines referrers,
practitioners and operators and discusses the process of
justification, giving suitable sample cases to highlight the issues.
I
would like to thank Paul Dubbins (Registrar), Peter Armstrong
(President) for their work in completing this text, the Clinical
Radiology Regional Chairmen's Committee and the Fellows who
contributed for their helpful comments.
Professor Iain McCall
Dean
Faculty of Clinical Radiology
1
Introduction
1.1 This paper has been prepared to help explain the process of
justification, one of the new requirements of the Ionising Radiation
(Medical Exposure) Regulations (IR(ME)R)1
governing medical exposures, which has replaced the
Ionising Radiation (Protection of Persons Undergoing Medical
Examination or Treatment) Regulations 1988.2
The paper concentrates on justification, because it is the central
task of the "practitioner" a newly defined title in IR(ME)R. This
will, therefore, be of particular interest to clinical radiologists,
other practitioners and those who employ practitioners. Advice
contained in this document applies to departments of clinical
radiology. The Department of Health published guidance in May 20003
in which it was made clear that "the ultimate arbiter in any case of
doubt would be the Court. Only it could make a definitive ruling".
1.2 New regulations on the medical use of ionising radiation have
been introduced to implement the revised Directive 97/43/Euratom,4
which was adopted by the EU Council on 30th June 1997. IR(ME)R 20001
implements these proposals for medical exposures in the
UK and defines the responsibilities of those involved in procedures
where an individual receives a radiation dose. They include advice
about maintaining exposures to levels as low as reasonably
practicable, advice about equipment quality, maintenance and quality
assurance. They also stress the need for justification of a medical
exposure, which shall "show a sufficient net benefit when the total
potential diagnostic or therapeutic benefits it produces, including
the direct health benefits to an individual and the benefits to
society, against the individual detriment that the exposure might
cause, taking into account the efficacy, benefits and risks of
available alternative techniques having the same objective but
involving no or less exposure to ionising radiation". Thus the
potential value for each exposure will need to be critically
assessed in advance of its performance to ensure that, for the
individual patient, the benefits to the patient or to society
outweigh the risks of the exposure.
1.3 Justification will be applied to individual medical exposures
taking into account the specific objectives of the exposure and the
characteristics of the individual involved, whether this be part of
medical diagnosis or treatment, as part of a programme of
occupational health surveillance, consequent upon health screening,
as part of medical research or for medico-legal purposes.
Directive 97/43/Euratom4
recommends extension of the process of justification to:
ˇ
new types of practice involving medical exposure in advance of being
generally adopted into medical practice;
ˇ
existing types of practice involving medical exposure whenever new
important evidence about their efficacy or consequences is acquired.
1.4 The following should understand the need for and the process of
justification:
ˇ
referrers;
ˇ
clinical radiologists;
ˇ
other medical or dental practitioners suitably trained in
radiological procedures;
ˇ
radiographers for whom protocols must be adequate to allow
authorisation of procedures with confidence;
ˇ
radiation protection advisers;
ˇ
Trust management boards responsible for the implementation and
supervision of clinical governance and with overall responsibility
for implementation of IR(ME)R;
ˇ
purchasing authorities with a responsibility for commissioning high
quality clinical imaging at low cost and with low radiation burden.
1.5 Medical exposures made as part of medical research shall be
examined by an Ethics Committee set up in accordance with local or
national practice.
1.6 In the justification of individual exposures there are critical
roles and responsibilities for several entities. These are discussed
in the following sections, and "vignettes" are presented within
shaded boxes to provide sample cases in order to illustrate key
points.
2
Critical roles and responsibilities in justification of individual
exposures
2.1 The employer
An
employer is usually the National Health Service Trust. However there
are a number of situations where diagnostic exposures are made
outwith NHS secondary/tertiary care. These may include x-ray
installations in general practice premises, in community hospitals
and in private practice. The employer in these cases may be the
General Practitioner (GP), the Primary Care Trust, a private
hospital, or the practitioner him/herself. The employer has a number
of responsibilities under the regulations which will have an impact
on the process of justification. These are:
ˇ
the identification of referrer, practitioner and operator having
regard to proper levels of training. This requires the employer to
keep a record of training and qualifications available for
inspection;
ˇ
establishment of recommendations concerning referral criteria for
medical exposures which are likely to be based on the Royal College
of Radiologists (RCR) guidelines Making the Best Use of a
Department of Clinical Radiology (MBUR4),5
but which may be varied according to local circumstances. These
locally agreed criteria must be made available to all referrers to
that department. There is an obligation to produce these criteria
regardless of the size of the department;
ˇ
identification of procedures to be followed in the case of exposures
performed for medico-legal purposes;
ˇ
identification of procedures to identify particular groups at higher
risk from the harmful effects of radiation: women who are pregnant
or breast feeding for example;
ˇ
establishment of procedures to be followed for medical exposures
performed as part of research programmes;
ˇ
ensuring that written procedures are in place and complied with.
2.2 The referrer
2.2.1 The referrer is responsible for the provision of sufficient
clinical information to enable the justification of the medical
exposure. A referrer is identified as a registered medical or dental
practitioner or health professional who is entitled to refer
individuals for medical exposure to a practitioner. Non-medically
qualified referrers might include such professionals as
radiographers, chiropractors, physiotherapists, osteopaths or
nurses.
2.2.2 Robust methods need to be devised to ensure that
electronically generated requests for imaging procedures are
authorised only by properly trained individuals.
2.2.3 The referrer has a particular responsibility to ensure the
completeness and accuracy of data relating to the patient's
condition. It is incumbent, therefore, upon the referrer, wherever
possible, to be fully informed about patient history, the presenting
complaint, the relevant past history and previous radiation exposure
relevant to the condition being investigated. The relevance of
physical findings as indicators for a medical exposure are also
requirements. Failure to provide such information might result in an
inappropriate exposure being performed or an exposure not being
performed because of lack of relevant information.
2.3 The practitioner
2.3.1 A practitioner is defined as a registered medical or dental
practitioner or other health professional who is entitled to take
responsibility for an individual medical exposure. Practitioners
might include radiologists, radiographers, cardiologists, surgeons
or others. However, the level of training of the practitioner laid
down in the document implies that there should be:
ˇ
an
understanding of the specific objectives of the exposure and the
characteristics of the individual involved;
ˇ
an
explicit opinion of the total potential diagnostic or therapeutic
health benefits including the direct health benefits to the
individual and the benefits to society;
ˇ
clear knowledge of the individual detriment the exposure may cause;
ˇ
information on the efficacy, benefits and risk of available
alternative techniques having the same objective but involving no,
or less, exposure to ionising radiation.
2.3.2 Decisions on who is entitled to act as a practitioner should
be taken at local level by agreement between the employer and the
health care professionals involved in medical exposure. The primary
responsibility of the practitioner is to justify; he/she will be
responsible professionally and legally for the justification of each
individual medical exposure. Therefore the practitioner requires
extensive knowledge of the properties of radiation, radiation
hazards and dosimetry, and any special situations where there are
particular risks from ionising radiation. He/she will have been
trained in radiological anatomy relevant to the area of practice for
which he/she assumes responsibility for justification. He/she will
need to be aware of medical conditions in which the ionising
radiation has a well-defined benefit to risk ratio, will be able to
interpret the value of existing appropriate radiological
information, have an appropriate knowledge of alternative techniques
which may effect a diagnosis, and be able to evaluate the potential
outcome of the individual exposure. He/she will, in collaboration
with the operator, ensure the proper and appropriate exposure and
the utilisation of appropriate methods of radiation protection.
2.3.3 The breadth of knowledge of a clinical radiologist allows
him/her to discharge the role of practitioner for the purposes of
justification for all clinical radiological procedures. In some
cases, particularly where radiation dose is low and/or the imaging
investigation is simple, other health care professionals may assume
the role and responsibility of a practitioner. Radiographers will
clearly use training and expertise to justify exposure of the
appendicular skeleton and of the chest and abdomen for well defined
clinical indications using guidelines approved by the radiology
department (see Section 4). In certain complex procedures other
medical practitioners will have received the breadth of training
appropriate to be a practitioner, for example cardiologists
experienced in the use of radiography and image intensification, and
angiography for cardiac and particularly coronary imaging.
2.3.4 Where it is not practicable for the practitioner to justify an
individual exposure the operator may authorise the exposure
according to written guidelines approved and issued by the
practitioner. It is recommended that the method of authorisation to
be used locally is ratified by the employer to ensure a consistent
approach.
|
An
orthopaedic surgeon requests fluoroscopy for internal fixation
of an unstable fracture of the wrist in a 14-year-old boy. The
clinical information conforms to guidelines for fluoroscopy
established by the practitioner (clinical radiologist). The
internal fixation proceeds. As operator, the radiographer has
continuing responsibility to update the surgeon with respect to
the radiation exposure, particularly if it exceeds the
diagnostic reference level. |
2.4 The operator
2.4.1 The operator is any person who carries out any practical
aspect of the medical exposure. Operators will be trained in those
aspects of radiation protection that will ensure proper performance
of the examination, optimising the technique to allow maximal
diagnostic information while ensuring that the radiation dose is
kept within the department's diagnostic reference levels.
2.4.2 The operator will, using department guidelines, authorise
certain exposures where it is not practicable for the practitioner
to provide immediate justification. Such guidelines will be prepared
by the practitioner for common procedures and should be subject to
regular audit and review.
2.4.3 The guidelines may be written to allow flexibility, e.g. an
agreed range of radiographic projections which may be taken to
provide the necessary clinical information. This will allow the
operator the appropriate freedom to exercise professional judgement.
3
The process of justification
3.1 The process of justification will require close co-operation
between employer, referrer, practitioner and operator. Ultimately,
the employer is responsible for ensuring that procedures are in
place to allow compliance with the regulations. These procedures
will be based, however, on advice from those trained in the
processes of ionising radiation protection and risk/benefit.
3.2 Justification of each imaging exposure will require
consideration of the following factors by the practitioner.
3.2.1 Determination of the appropriateness of the request.
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A
GP requests a chest x-ray for a 63-year-old woman who has
recently joined his practice.
She is
asymptomatic. The practitioner (a clinical radiologist)
determines that the clinical details do not justify the exposure
and returns the request to the GP with an explanatory letter.
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3.2.2 Optimisation of the imaging strategy.
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A 24-year-old
woman presents with right iliac fossa pain. The pregnancy test
is negative, and the referrer (the Accident & Emergency
specialist) requests abdominal CT for suspected appendicitis.
The clinical
radiologist (the practitioner) recommends ultrasound (including
transvaginal and graded compression studies) as an effective
alternative technique which does not involve ionising radiation.
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3.2.3 The risk versus benefit.
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A
35-year-old woman presents with a breast lump. The surgeon
requests a mammogram.
The radiographer
(operator) does not authorise the mammogram as it falls outwith
departmental guidelines. The clinical radiologist (practitioner)
determines that the risk to benefit ratio in a patient of this
age would not justify an exposure and an ultrasound is performed
which confirms features of a benign fibroadenoma.
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3.2.4 Understanding the immediate and cumulative radiation effects.
This is of particular importance in exposures involving high
radiation dose especially when there is a likelihood that repeated
imaging will be required, for example for the long-term monitoring
of malignant disease. In these cases the risk to benefit ratio of
the imaging procedure should be presented explicitly to the patient
through discussion between the referrer (usually an oncology
specialist) and the practitioner (the clinical radiologist).
3.2.5 Consideration of age specific issues. For example, the use of
imaging examinations that do not involve ionising radiation
procedures are important in children, particularly when frequent
follow-up imaging is required.
3.2.6 The urgency of the exposure. For example when radiation
carries a particular risk, as in pregnancy, and could reasonably be
delayed until after delivery.
3.2.7 The efficacy of imaging in different clinical situations.
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A
patient presents with a fever and abdominal pain after bowel
resection. Ultrasound reveals a mass in the right iliac fossa
with complex echoes suggestive of gas. Although ultrasound
guidance of abscess drainage is frequently possible
post-operatively, the practitioner (clinical radiologist)
determines that in this situation it is not possible to exclude
intervening bowel and performs the drainage under CT guidance. |
3.2.8 Appropriate delegation. An example of inappropriate delegation
is given in the following vignette.
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A
nurse practitioner in casualty requests CT of the abdomen for a
44-year-old man with acute abdominal pain. It is 4.00 a.m. and
the procedure is carried out without consultation with the
clinical radiologist. |
There are a number of issues here that require consideration:
ˇ
In
order for the nurse practitioner to act as referrer in this case it
must be demonstrated that he/she possesses the diagnostic skills to
evaluate a patient with abdominal pain and to determine with a
probability equivalent to that of a medical practitioner within the
same department an accurate presumptive diagnosis of renal colic.
He/she should be aware of the many possible diagnoses, clinical
presentations and of the alternative imaging strategies. For
example, acute pancreatitis requires a blood test for serum
analysis, and acute pyelonephritis would require no more than renal
ultrasound. Currently it is unlikely that the nurse practitioner
would be entitled to assume the role of practitioner. Referral for
abdominal CT would require entitlement from the employer following
agreement with the accident and emergency department, the department
of clinical radiology and the nurse practitioner.
ˇ
Justification of the procedure in this clinical situation requires
knowledge of the symptomatology and its relation to appropriate
pathology, as well as knowledge of current practice of clinical
radiology. The operator is not in a position to act as practitioner
in this case, as he/she cannot determine the appropriateness of the
clinical details and the consideration of an alternative imaging
strategy. Furthermore urgent CT requires an urgent report.
ˇ
The RCR could not support the process of justification outlined in
this scenario. In complex situations like this, it is the view of
the RCR that the referrer should currently be a medical
practitioner, the practitioner should be a clinical radiologist and
the operator should be an experienced CT radiographer.
3.2.9 Evaluation of exposures that have no health benefit to the
individual but have a perceived benefit to society e.g. immigration
chest x-ray.
4
Guidelines
The RCR has published guidelines on referral for most imaging
investigations in Making the Best Use of a Department of Clinical
Radiology.5
The College has updated and modified this advice regularly. It is
likely that the process of justification in individual departments
will draw heavily on MBUR.
Approved by the Board of the Faculty of Clinical Radiology: 5 May
2000
Approved by Council:
26
May 2000
BFCR(00)5
References
1
Department of Health (2000) Ionising Radiation (Medical Exposure)
Regulations IS 1999/3232. Norwich: Stationery Office.
2
Department of Health (1988) The Ionising Radiation (Protection of
Persons Undergoing Medical Examination or Treatment) Regulations.
London: Department of Health.
3
Department of Health (2000) IRMER Guidance Notes. Department
of Health (Website
http://www.doh.gov.uk/irmer.htm).
4
Council Directive 97/43/Euratom of 30 June 1997. The Medical
Exposures Directive (1997) Official Journal 180:22-27.
5
The Royal College of Radiologists (1998) Making the Best Use of a
Department of Clinical Radiology. Guidelines for Doctors, 4th
Edn. London: The Royal College of Radiologists.
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