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U.S. experts weigh how to reduce radiation from scans

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CHICAGO | Wed Jun 23, 2010 6:29pm EDT

CHICAGO (Reuters) - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration should step in to protect patients from radiation from CT scanners, according to one expert in the ongoing debate over the safe use of medical imaging.

Others say doctors should stop ordering so many scans, which often find conditions that might have been better left untreated. But they argue against FDA regulation, which may keep companies from investing in new innovations.

Both sides of the debate, published on Wednesday on the New England Journal of Medicine website, reflect ongoing concerns about how to best use advanced diagnostic tests.

Overuse of the costly scans has been a concern of policymakers for the past few years, prompting cuts in Medicare reimbursement. And recent studies on radiation risks from computed tomography or CT scans and several cases of accidental radiation overdoses have drawn the attention of the FDA.

A CT scan of the chest exposes a patient to more than 100 times the radiation of an X-ray and an abdominal CT scan is roughly equivalent to 400 chest X-rays.

A report last year by the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurement found that Americans receive seven times more radiation from diagnostic scans than in 1980.

"We need to start taking this seriously," said Dr. Rebecca Smith-Bindman of the University of California San Francisco, and a visiting research scientist at the National Cancer Institute, one of the National Institutes of Health.

"Radiation doses are higher than they should be and they vary dramatically within and between facilities and that is not acceptable," said Smith-Bindman, who wrote one of the commentaries calling for the FDA to regulate CT scans.

Part of the problem is that there are no uniform standards for how much radiation is needed to produce a scan, which means two patients may be getting vastly different amounts of radiation to get the same diagnosis.

Smith-Bindman advocates for regulation similar to what already exists now at the FDA for mammograms.

Part of the problem, she said, is agreeing on a standard dose, especially when obese patients need more radiation to produce the same image.

"What we've done as a community is to say, 'It's hard. We can't do it,'" she said in a telephone interview.

ANTI-IMAGING PERFECT STORM

But heaping more regulation on an industry that has already been squeezed by Medicare cuts may squelch the kind of innovation that produced CT scanners in the first place, says Dr. Bruce Hillman, a professor of radiology at the University of Virginia in a commentary.

"There already is a strong regulatory bias against imaging," said Hillman, who argues that doctors need to show more restraint in ordering imaging tests.

"If this becomes much worse, things will become so draconian there will no longer be an investment in innovation," Hillman said in a telephone interview.

"There is this perfect anti-imaging perfect storm going on right now".

Hillman said the real threat from using advanced imaging technology is when doctors stumble on a potential problem and need to follow up.

He said doctors need to be more critical about using medical imaging, reserving it for patients who really need it.

"We need to convince physicians that a quest for certainty is impossible, costly and is harmful because of indirect diagnoses," he said.

(Editing by Maggie Fox and Cynthia Osterman)

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Comments (4)
Aarky wrote:
By the time I received a memo form my insurance company warning of the dangers, I was way over my life time limit. This article didn’t point out how so many people are over exposed.People not being educated about the dangers of too many Cat Scans. People going to different doctors, who have no idea of previous Cat scans. Doctors who are willing to give a Cat Scan “just to see how things are going” should not be giving that scan. Worst of all would be the doctor who orders routine scans to help pay for the enormous cost of the machine. Shame on the doctors who suggest that restrictions on the use of scans will inhibit innovation. I will have to fear getting some sort of CAT scan radiation induced cancer for the rest of my life.

Jun 24, 2010 3:25pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
DaveFisher wrote:
The Medical Imaging & Technology Alliance supports Dr. Rebecca Smith-Bindman’s call for reducing radiation dose for CT imaging and implementing appropriateness criteria for CT scans.

As mentioned, CT manufacturers have made great progress in further reducing radiation dose and are continuing to do so as they implement the CT Dose Check Initiative, an unprecedented commitment by CT manufacturers to ensure safe and effective scans. This includes:
• Recording dose information consistently to track dose levels,
• Reducing dose by deploying notifications on CT machines so operators know when recommended radiation dose levels will be exceeded, and
• Reducing medical errors by adding additional dose alerts that can prevent CT machines from scanning above certain dose levels.

MITA has also been a longtime advocate for the use of appropriateness criteria as a critical way to reduce dose by preventing unnecessary scans.

David Fisher, Executive Director of the Medical Imaging & Technology Alliance

Jun 24, 2010 5:24pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
sjayagopal wrote:
There are several factors.
1. a CT scan is faster than waiting for any lab test results. If CT study is negative, the patient can be discharged faster from the emergency room. Most CT studies will not be orderd if it is mandatory to wait for the lab tests results.
2. All the healthcare providers are made to spend enormous amount of time to take care of paper/computer work than spend time talking and examining the patient which would help narrow down the diagnosis. This also involves withspending too much time in entering unrelated data.
3.Follow up CT scans are unnecessarily done even if the patient has started feeling better.
4. with the increased speed of the CT scanners, the technologists are pushed to do very many cases per day where there is no time for them to converse with the patient to obtain pertinent history.
5. Body images are obtained with standard protocol and not tailored to the patients anatomy, physiogy, pathology etc. The patients wind up being recalled or getting unnecessary follow up study to get an answer.
6. The quality of the examinations and accuracy of the diagnosis will definitily improve drastically if the radiologist spends3-5 min. to review the study prior to the patient being taken off the table.
7. Due to the demand of rapid turnover of the studies, the technologists do the examinations with eyes wide shut.
8. Althought the technologists ought to maintain CME, they are not encouraged to do so and majority these days have neither any clue of the disrders they are dealing with nor have any interest to know the disorder. The employers do not care about the techs. CME status. Half knowledge is dangerous!

Jun 24, 2010 10:43pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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