TY - JOUR
T1 - The use of Dose Management Systems in Europe
T2 - Results of an ESR EuroSafe Imaging Questionnaire
AU - Loose, Reinhard
AU - Vano, Eliseo
AU - Ammon, Josefin
AU - Andersson, Jonas
AU - Brat, Hugues
AU - Brkljacic, Boris
AU - Caikovska, Katrina
AU - Corridori, Riccardo
AU - Damilakis, John
AU - De Bondt, Timo
AU - Frija, Guy
AU - Granata, Claudio
AU - Hoeschen, Christoph
AU - Kotter, Elmar
AU - Kralik, Ivana
AU - McNulty, Jonathan
AU - Paulo, Graciano
AU - Tsapaki, Virginia
AU - European Society of Radiology
N1 - Loose, Ammon: Institute of Medical Physics, Paracelsus Medical School, Hospital Nuremberg, Nuremberg, Germany
PY - 2024/8/9
Y1 - 2024/8/9
N2 - Dose management systems (DMS) are an essential tool for quality assurance and optimising patient radiation exposure. For radiologists and medical physicists, they are important for managing many radiation protection tasks. In addition, they help fulfil the requirements of Directive 2013/59/EURATOM regarding the electronic transmission of dosimetric data and the detection of unintended patient exposures. The EuroSafe Imaging Clinical Dosimetry and Dose Management Working Group launched a questionnaire on the use of DMS in European member states and analysed the results in terms of modalities, frequency of radiological procedures, involvement of medical physics experts (MPEs), legal requirements, and local issues (support by information technology (IT), modality interfaces, protocol mapping, clinical workflow, and associated costs).Critical relevance statementDespite the great advantages of dose management systems for optimising radiation protection, distribution remains insufficient. This questionnaire shows that reasons include: a lack of DICOM interfaces, insufficient harmonisation of procedure names, lack of medical physicist and IT support, and costs.Key PointsQuantitative radiation dose information is essential for justification and optimisation in medical imaging.Guidelines are required to ensure radiation dose management systems quality and for acceptance testing.Verifying dose data management is crucial before dose management systems clinical implementation.Medical physics experts are professionals who have important responsibilities for the proper management of dose monitoring.
AB - Dose management systems (DMS) are an essential tool for quality assurance and optimising patient radiation exposure. For radiologists and medical physicists, they are important for managing many radiation protection tasks. In addition, they help fulfil the requirements of Directive 2013/59/EURATOM regarding the electronic transmission of dosimetric data and the detection of unintended patient exposures. The EuroSafe Imaging Clinical Dosimetry and Dose Management Working Group launched a questionnaire on the use of DMS in European member states and analysed the results in terms of modalities, frequency of radiological procedures, involvement of medical physics experts (MPEs), legal requirements, and local issues (support by information technology (IT), modality interfaces, protocol mapping, clinical workflow, and associated costs).Critical relevance statementDespite the great advantages of dose management systems for optimising radiation protection, distribution remains insufficient. This questionnaire shows that reasons include: a lack of DICOM interfaces, insufficient harmonisation of procedure names, lack of medical physicist and IT support, and costs.Key PointsQuantitative radiation dose information is essential for justification and optimisation in medical imaging.Guidelines are required to ensure radiation dose management systems quality and for acceptance testing.Verifying dose data management is crucial before dose management systems clinical implementation.Medical physics experts are professionals who have important responsibilities for the proper management of dose monitoring.
KW - Computer applications-general
KW - Diagnostic procedure
KW - Dose management
KW - Quality assurance
KW - Radioprotection
UR - https://www.webofscience.com/api/gateway?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=pmu_pure&SrcAuth=WosAPI&KeyUT=WOS:001288257700003&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=WOS_CPL
U2 - 10.1186/s13244-024-01765-x
DO - 10.1186/s13244-024-01765-x
M3 - Original Article (Journal)
C2 - 39120665
SN - 1869-4101
VL - 15
JO - INSIGHTS INTO IMAGING
JF - INSIGHTS INTO IMAGING
IS - 1
M1 - 201
ER -