Download - Quality Assurance At Wellspring
Quality Assurance at Wellspring
The program is in place to ensure that patients are treated properly and that the radiation treatments are being delivered safely and accurately
Recent articles in the news have raised questions and concerns about the accuracy and safety of radiation treatments.
The process of monitoring and verifying both safety and accuracy is included in the quality assurance (QA) program.
Radiation therapy is one of the safest, most effective ways to treat cancer. There were an estimated 35.4 million radiotherapy treatments on Varian and Tomotherapy machines last year.
Errors do occur, but they are extremely rare, with less than 0.0001 percent of treatments involving an incident that puts a patient at risk of harm.
QA Starts with the staff or medical team that is taking care of the patient
People…make the difference
The first and most important component of a QA program is the personnel.
All cancer treatments are performed under the direction of physicians who are board certified radiation oncologist, the daily administration is performed by certified and state licensed radiation therapists (RTT),
the computer and dose calculations are performed by RTT’s who are certified in dosimetry and
oversight of the machines, computers and all dose plans and calculations are supervised by certified medical physicists.
Certification and Radiation Therapy
Radiation Oncologists certified by the American Board of Radiology and licensed by the State
Medical Physicists certified by the American Board of Radiology and licensed by the State of Florida
Medical Radiation Dosimetrists certified by the Medical Dosimetry Certification Board
Radiation Therapists certified by the American Registry of Radiologic Technologists and license by the State of Florida
The Role of the Radiation Oncologist
The Role of the Radiation OncologistIndividualized patient evaluation
Detailed history and physical of patient Discussion of treatment options with patient including probability
of success, possible side effects, etc. Decision on specific course of treatment, informed consent Prescription for radiation therapy is put into the electronic chart
(Aria) and password protected so that the computer will not allow the patient to receive more than the dose and technique programmed in by the doctor
Two questions everyone thinks about
Are they hitting the right spot?
Am I getting the right dose?
Hitting the right spot
Targeting of the tumor and avoiding healthy normal tissue requires several steps
Simulation – the patient is put into a position that can be reproduced every day and imaging studies are performed to visualize all the important normal anatomy and identify the tumor target
Simulation
At the time of simulation the patient is placed in a reproducible position, often with immobilization.
For patients with cancer in the head or neck area a face mask (auqaplast) is usually made to hold the head still and allow the targeting markings to be painted on the mask. For other areas of the body a vaclock bag will mold around the body to ensure that the patient is in the same position every day.
Skin marks or tattoo's are used to match the laser mounted in the room and on the machine
CT scan, MRI or PET is obtained at this time
CT images are then imported into the treatment planning computer
In the simulation process the CT and PET scan images are used to create a computer reconstruction of the patient and cancer
PET and CT Scan used to create radiation target
PET Scan , showing cancer in right tongue
Computer generated reconstruction, the target area is in red
Using the computer generated images the physician can carefully target the cancer and avoid normal structures
Treatment Plan QA
After a plan has been approved by the Physician, it is sent to the Physicist for review
The Physicist checks to make sure all information (prescription, simulation, etc.) has been entered correctly into the computer
At a minimum, the Physicist checks the calculated beam-on time for each field using a hand calculation or independent computer program
Hitting the right spot
During the daily treatment the patient is positioned in the same position as the simulation, lasers, skin marks or tattoo's and immobilization are used to verify the correct position. Everyday the lasers are checked prior to the start of the day.
The daily set up is performed by certified RTT’s
Hitting the right spot
Once the patient is laying on the radiation table, images can be taken to verify that the beam is targeting the correct site (called portal imaging) or on the Tomotherapy machine a true CT scan is obtained daily prior to treatment
Hitting the right spot…the same machine that produces the radiation can take a picture at the same time and the image (portal image) is compared with the computer generated target image (DRR)
DRR – computer generated image
The portal image showing the actual area treated that day
CT Scan prior to radiation Tomo image after only 19 treatments
cancer cancer
With image guided therapy (Tomotherapy) a CT scan is obtained prior to every treatment to check the accuracy of the targeting and determine if the tumor is shrinking or changing position
Importance of daily CT targeting on Tomotherapyand adjusting the treatment daily
Very little bowel gas on initial study and the dose (red) targets the prostate gland closely
large bowel gas on later treatment day and the dose (red) will cover half the rectum if an adjustment is not made
If no adjustment was made
Actual treatment on Tomotherapy prior to treating the patient, the radiation beam (in red) was shifted upward and no longer hits the rectum
Two questions everyone thinks about
Are they hitting the right spot?
Am I getting the right dose?
Using the proper dose of radiation
“It may be a bit over-exposed”
Radiation History
Radiation has been used to treat patients since the late 1890’s and there is extensive information available about the proper and safe dose
Information about the safe and effective doses of radiation
Tables about the safe and recommended doses of radiation can be found on our web site, and the NCCN now publishes online, very detailed information about recommended doses of radiation
Am I getting the right dose?
After the patient has been simulated and computer plans generated by the staff and reviewed by the physicist, the physician enters the dose into the electronic chart and locks this in with a password, this prevents the machine or the staff from exceeding this dose.
How do I know if the machine has been calibrated correctly and am actually receiving the dose called for by the computer plans or the physicians prescription ?
Calibrating and verifying that the machines and computers are working properly - 5 steps
1. Every day prior to treating patients, the linear accelerator and TomoTherapy machines are tested with a device (the QA beam checker) that verifies that the output of the machine is correct in shape, energy level and dose
Calibrating and verifying that the machines and computers are working properly - 5 steps
2. The machines also undergo monthly and annual evaluation and calibration by the medical physicist to verify they are exactly calibrated
Calibrating and verifying that the machines and computers are working properly - 5 steps
3. On a regular basis a device (TLD) is radiated to a fixed dose and then mailed to an outside expert center (MD Anderson) to independently verify that the dose output is accurate, as well as a body ‘phantom’ is used to verify the proper dose distribution
Calibrating and verifying that the machines and computers are working properly - 5 steps
4. Other radiation measurement devices are placed on the patient (mosfet and electronic dosimeters) to independently verify that the patients is receiving the dose predicted by the computer plan
Calibrating and verifying that the machines and computers are working properly - 5 steps
5. Prior to treating the patient with any complex plan (e.g. IMRT or Tomotherapy) a measurement device (called a phantom) is treated with the patient’s dose plan to verify that the computer calculations and the shaping devices (MLC) are working properly
Machine Quality Assurance
The QA program at Wellspring complies with standards set by:– State of Florida Radiation Control Regulations
(64E-5 Florida Administrative Code)– Reports published by the American Association of
Physicists in Medicine (AAPM)– Reports published by the National Council of
Radiation Protection (NCRP)