Radiation Safety in Children With Congenital and Acquired Heart Disease: A Scientific Position Statement on Multimodality Dose Optimization From the Image Gently Alliance.
Journal Article (Journal Article;Review)
There is a need for consensus recommendations for ionizing radiation dose optimization during multimodality medical imaging in children with congenital and acquired heart disease (CAHD). These children often have complex diseases and may be exposed to a relatively high cumulative burden of ionizing radiation from medical imaging procedures, including cardiac computed tomography, nuclear cardiology studies, and fluoroscopically guided diagnostic and interventional catheterization and electrophysiology procedures. Although these imaging procedures are all essential to the care of children with CAHD and have contributed to meaningfully improved outcomes in these patients, exposure to ionizing radiation is associated with potential risks, including an increased lifetime attributable risk of cancer. The goal of these recommendations is to encourage informed imaging to achieve appropriate study quality at the lowest achievable dose. Other strategies to improve care include a patient-centered approach to imaging, emphasizing education and informed decision making and programmatic approaches to ensure appropriate dose monitoring. Looking ahead, there is a need for standardization of dose metrics across imaging modalities, so as to encourage comparative effectiveness studies across the spectrum of CAHD in children.
Full Text
Duke Authors
Cited Authors
- Hill, KD; Frush, DP; Han, BK; Abbott, BG; Armstrong, AK; DeKemp, RA; Glatz, AC; Greenberg, SB; Herbert, AS; Justino, H; Mah, D; Mahesh, M; Rigsby, CK; Slesnick, TC; Strauss, KJ; Trattner, S; Viswanathan, MN; Einstein, AJ; Image Gently Alliance,
Published Date
- July 2017
Published In
Volume / Issue
- 10 / 7
Start / End Page
- 797 - 818
PubMed ID
- 28514670
Pubmed Central ID
- PMC5542588
Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)
- 1876-7591
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
- 10.1016/j.jcmg.2017.04.003
Language
- eng
Conference Location
- United States