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Radiation Protection in Radiotherapy

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Consignments are often sent by default' to the hospital store. Care must be taken that: ... of packaging, the preparation, consigning, loading, carriage, unloading and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Radiation Protection in Radiotherapy


1
Radiation Protection inRadiotherapy
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in
Radiotherapy
  • Part 14
  • Transport Safety

2
Transport of sources
  • A problem in external beam therapy only for
    dosimetric check sources and in the context of
    source replacement for a tele-therapy unit
  • A day-to-day problem in brachytherapy

3
Objective
  • To understand the process of
  • ordering
  • storage
  • accounting for
  • and transport
  • of radiation sources within the hospital and
    externally
  • To appreciate the protection and safety issues
    associated with this process

4
Contents
  • 1 Notes on ordering of sources
  • 2 Transport
  • IAEA transport regulations
  • external of the hospital
  • internal
  • 3 Storage and accounting
  • Disposal discussed in part 15

5
1. Ordering of sources
  • Need authorization
  • Require all relevant licenses
  • Order from approved supplier
  • More in part 18 of the course

6
The BSS on ordering and transport
  • General obligations
  • 2.7. No practice shall be adopted, introduced,
    conducted, discontinued or ceased and no source
    within a practice shall, as applicable, be mined,
    milled, processed, designed, manufactured,
    constructed, assembled, acquired, imported,
    exported, distributed, sold, loaned, hired,
    received, sited, located, commissioned,
    possessed, used, operated, maintained, repaired,
    transferred, decommissioned, disassembled,
    transported, stored or disposed of, except in
    accordance with the appropriate requirements of
    the Standards, unless the exposure from such
    practice or source is excluded from the Standards
    or the practice or source is exempted from the
    requirements of the Standards, including the
    requirements of notification and authorization.

7
Receiving of sources
  • Consignments are often sent by default to the
    hospital store
  • Care must be taken that
  • either sources are directly sent to and received
    by the person who holds the appropriate license
    and has the appropriate expertise
  • or that the hospital receiving officer is trained
    appropriately, records all details of the
    shipping and informs the responsible person in
    radiotherapy immediately
  • Radioactive sources MUST not be allowed to be
    stored with other goods without being under
    immediate control of an appropriately trained
    person

8
2. Transport of radioactive sources for
radiotherapy
  • Between the radiotherapy center and outside
    facilities
  • delivery of sources
  • disposal of sources
  • transport between hospitals
  • Within the radiotherapy center

9
BSS and transport
  • General obligations
  • 2.9. The transport of radioactive sources shall
    be subject to the requirements of the IAEA
    Regulations for the Safe Transport of Radioactive
    Material and any applicable international
    convention.

10
Transport of Radioactive Material
  • IAEA Safety Standards No. ST-1 Regulations for
    the Safe Transport of Radioactive Material, 1996
    Edition

11
Objective of the IAEA Transport Regulations
  • To protect persons, property and the environment
    from the effects of radiation during the
    transport of radioactive material. This
    protection is achieved by requiring
  • containment of the radioactive contents
  • control of external radiation levels
  • prevention of criticality (not a concern for
    radiotherapy sources)
  • prevention of damage caused by heat.

12
Scope of the IAEA Transport Regulations
  • The Regulations apply to the transport of
    radioactive material by all modes on land, water
    or in the air.
  • The Regulations cover the design and manufacture
    of packaging, the preparation, consigning,
    loading, carriage, unloading and receipt of the
    packages.

13
Types of Packages as defined by the IAEA
Transport Regulations
  • Excepted package
  • Industrial package Type 1, 2 and 3
  • Type A package
  • Type B(U) package
  • Type B(M) package
  • Type C package

14
(No Transcript)
15
Type B container
  • Used for transport of 60-Co sources for external
    beam therapy
  • Used for 192-Ir sources for high dose rate
    brachytherapy

16
Please note
  • Usually the head of a 60-Co unit is NOT a
    suitable container for transport of the source!

17
In practice
  • The transport container and the treatment unit
    may be identical (as seen here for the Nucletron
    HDR brachytherapy afterloading unit)

Courtesy of Nucletron
18
Gammamed mobile unit
  • Must be labelled once source is present
  • Easy to transport
  • Must be accompanied by appropriately trained
    person

Courtesy of MDS Nordion
19
The Transport Index
  • The Transport Index is the maximum radiation
    level, in mSv/h, at a distance of 1 m from the
    external surface of the package, multiplied by
    100.
  • The categories of packages, are determined by the
    Transport Index and the maximum radiation level
    at any point on the surface of the package.

20
Categories of Packages
21
White-I Label
  • lt 5.0 ?Sv/h _at_ surface
  • lt 0.05 ?Sv/h _at_ 1.0 m
  • TI close to 0

22
Yellow-II Label
  • lt 500 ?Sv/h, gt 5 ?Sv/h
  • _at_ surface
  • lt 10 ?Sv/h _at_ 1.0 m
  • 0 lt TI lt 1.0

23
Yellow-III Label
  • gt 500, lt 2000?Sv/h _at_ surface
  • gt 10, lt 100?Sv/h _at_ 1.0m
  • 1.0 lt TI lt 10

24
Vehicle Placards
  • Required every time activity is transported
  • Need at least three
  • Other documentation also required

25
Consignors Responsibilities
  • all labelling and placarding
  • provision of transport documents
  • provision of local rules and any other relevant
    information

26
Package Labels
  • Package type
  • Isotope, activity, calibration date
  • Transport index (surface dose)

27
Potential problems in Brachytherapy
  • Source order, delivery, calibration and
    acceptance
  • Different units were used by the hospital (mCi)
    and the manufacturer (mg-Ra-equivalent) this led
    to an overdosage of 74 of one patient
  • In three cases there was an underdosage due to
    the use of the sources without checking the
    source activity.

28
Brachytherapy problems
  • Source order, delivery, calibration and
    acceptance. Contributing factors
  • Different units were used by the hospital and
    manufacturer
  • Insufficient check of documents (order and
    delivery
  • No source calibration by the users (source
    strength determination)

29
Transport of sources between hospitals
  • Brachytherapy sources prepared on a different
    site to where they are used
  • often the case for highly specialized medical
    areas such as eye surgery
  • Radioactive applicators stored at a different
    site to where they are used
  • ophthalmic applicators

30
Transport of sources between hospitals
  • May be the case for entire HDR brachytherapy unit
    and control
  • Infrastructure (cables, beds, theatre) in place
    at multiple locations

Courtesy of Nucletron
31
Transport within a hospital
  • Aim to minimize all transport needs by initial
    layout of the facility or choice of brachytherapy
    areas.

32
Transport within a hospital
  • Often required for brachytherapy
  • Need mobile safe to suit the isotope in use
  • Transport must be accompanied by an appropriately
    trained person at all times
  • Labels required

33
Transport containers
  • Maximum dose rate at the surface should be
    lt100mSv/hr
  • Should have large wheels to negotiate uneven
    surfaces
  • Could double up as emergency storage container

Courtesy of Nucletron
34
Transport within a hospital
  • Some practical suggestions
  • Transport routes must be chosen prior to
    transport and adhered to
  • Avoid lifts
  • Avoid public areas (not only to protect patients
    but also to minimize anxiety of patients and
    others)

35
Transport of patients with radioactive implants
  • Should be avoided for brachytherapy patients
  • shielding is difficult
  • the implant may move during transport
  • Label and signs required

36
Transport of patients with implants
  • If possible, the activity should be removed prior
    to transport of the patient

37
Disposal of sources
  • Only to person licensed to do this
  • Documentation required
  • This is a potential for accidents
  • Compare part 15 of the course

BIN
38
3. Source storage
  • See part 15 Safety of sources
  • Before ordering sources it must be assured that
    they can be safely stored
  • Information required for storage is similar to
    information required for transport

39
Features of source storage
  • Secure (lock and key)
  • Labels
  • Different compartments
  • Shielding
  • Easy access

40
BSS on Security of sources
  • 2.34. Sources shall be kept secure so as to
    prevent theft or damage and to prevent any
    unauthorized legal person from carrying out any
    of the actions specified in the General
    Obligations for practices of the Standards (see
    paras 2.7-2.9), by ensuring that
  • ...
  • (b) a source not be transferred unless the
    receiver possesses a valid authorization and
  • (c) a periodic inventory of movable sources be
    conducted at appropriate intervals to confirm
    that they are in their assigned locations and are
    secure.

41
In radiotherapy practice
  • Source storage area should be close to areas
    where the sources are to be used (theatres,
    brachytherapy ward)
  • Storage and transport containers are usually of
    different design - a storage container is NOT
    necessarily suitable for transport

42
Emergency storage
  • In brachytherapy an emergency storage container
    should be available in case a source must be
    removed form the patient.

43
Emergency storage
  • Next to temporary LDR implants in case sources
    must be removed for medical emergency
  • Next to HDR applications in case the source gets
    stuck and the whole applicator has to be removed

44
Summary
  • Transport of sources is always a potential for
    exposure
  • Source transport is mainly an issue in the
    context of brachytherapy
  • Appropriate containers and labeling is required
  • Transport issues can occur outside and inside of
    a radiotherapy facility

45
Any questions?
46
Question
  • Please design a source inventory suitable for
    your institution.

47
Some suggestions
  • Should include
  • Type of source
  • Activity (and date of specification)
  • Ordered by (authorization?)
  • Received by
  • Received when
  • Storage where?
  • Patient name and identification number (for
    brachytherapy patients)
  • Used for?
  • Can be disposed of when (if applicable)
  • Disposed by
  • Disposed when
  • Disposed to

48
Acknowledgment
  • Lee Collins, Westmead Hospital, Sydney
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