Insights into handling and delivery of Y-90 radioembolization therapies.

Dustin R Osborne, Gregory Minwell, Bradley Pollard, Chris Walker, Shelley N Acuff, Kristen Smith, Cain Green, Rachel Taylor, Christopher D Stephens
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This paper seeks to examine various aspects of delivery techniques, product handling, and radiation exposure that differ between the available and approved products. Understanding these differences can assist with providing more efficient treatment, confirmation of accurate therapy, more informed handling of the products, and improved training of physicians and other hospital staff.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>Two commercially available and approved radioembolization devices were compared to assess nuanced, but key differences between the available products regarding therapy delivery, handling of the products, and radiation exposure to patients and staff. This work is broken into two sections: (1) Therapy Delivery, (2) Radiation Safety. Therapy delivery characteristics were assessed by using an external radiation detector system with detectors placed inside of each delivery system facing the dose vial and on the output catheter lines to the patient. Additional detectors were placed near the liver of the patient and on top of the foot to measure extremities. Data were acquired continuously throughout therapy delivery to collect time activity curves (TACs) for the characterization of each therapy. These data were analyzed to assess if (a) real-time monitoring of radiation could be used to provide an accurate assessment of residual dose before the patient leaves the procedure room, and (b) can dose delivery characteristics be observed that enable improved training and quality control. Calculation of residual dose using the external detector TACs was performed by analyzing initial and final activity peaks to determine measured count rate differences. Radiation safety aspects were assessed by monitoring radiation exposure to staff handling each of the available therapy products. Nuclear medicine technologists and interventional radiology physician body and hand doses were measured for each delivered therapy using standard body and ring dosimeters. The TACs noted above collected for the liver and extremities were used to assess if any off-target or leached Y90 activity could be detected for each therapy. Blood was collected at times before, during, and after treatment and then counted on a gamma counter to assess differences in free Y90 circulating in the blood. Each patient in this study also received a post-treatment whole-body PET/CT at 2-4 h post-infusion to assess for any aggregate free Y90 deposition that may have resulted from circulating free Y90 in the subject following therapy.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Calculations of residual dose in the vial following therapy using the real-time detection methods resulted in values that were not statistically different from the values calculated by nuclear medicine following the procedure ( <math><mi>p</mi> <mo>></mo> <mn>0.05</mn></math> ). Real-time collection of dose delivery data enabled observation of key characteristics related to each delivery method. For SIR-spheres procedures, the cycle of pushing the dose and visualizing with fluoro can easily be seen with each push resulting in a smaller and smaller peak with intermittent fluoroscopy pulses. TheraSpheres infusions show a rapid bolus with nearly all of the measurable injected activity being infused in the first push of the dose. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: The use of Y-90 radioembolization techniques has become a standard tool for the treatment of liver cancer and metastatic diseases that result in liver lesions. As there are only two approved forms of radioembolization therapy, the procedures for use are also fairly standardized even though exact international and interdepartmental procedures can vary. What has been less published over the years are the nuanced differences in delivery techniques and handling of the two available Y90 radioembolization therapies. This paper seeks to examine various aspects of delivery techniques, product handling, and radiation exposure that differ between the available and approved products. Understanding these differences can assist with providing more efficient treatment, confirmation of accurate therapy, more informed handling of the products, and improved training of physicians and other hospital staff.

Methods: Two commercially available and approved radioembolization devices were compared to assess nuanced, but key differences between the available products regarding therapy delivery, handling of the products, and radiation exposure to patients and staff. This work is broken into two sections: (1) Therapy Delivery, (2) Radiation Safety. Therapy delivery characteristics were assessed by using an external radiation detector system with detectors placed inside of each delivery system facing the dose vial and on the output catheter lines to the patient. Additional detectors were placed near the liver of the patient and on top of the foot to measure extremities. Data were acquired continuously throughout therapy delivery to collect time activity curves (TACs) for the characterization of each therapy. These data were analyzed to assess if (a) real-time monitoring of radiation could be used to provide an accurate assessment of residual dose before the patient leaves the procedure room, and (b) can dose delivery characteristics be observed that enable improved training and quality control. Calculation of residual dose using the external detector TACs was performed by analyzing initial and final activity peaks to determine measured count rate differences. Radiation safety aspects were assessed by monitoring radiation exposure to staff handling each of the available therapy products. Nuclear medicine technologists and interventional radiology physician body and hand doses were measured for each delivered therapy using standard body and ring dosimeters. The TACs noted above collected for the liver and extremities were used to assess if any off-target or leached Y90 activity could be detected for each therapy. Blood was collected at times before, during, and after treatment and then counted on a gamma counter to assess differences in free Y90 circulating in the blood. Each patient in this study also received a post-treatment whole-body PET/CT at 2-4 h post-infusion to assess for any aggregate free Y90 deposition that may have resulted from circulating free Y90 in the subject following therapy.

Results: Calculations of residual dose in the vial following therapy using the real-time detection methods resulted in values that were not statistically different from the values calculated by nuclear medicine following the procedure ( p > 0.05 ). Real-time collection of dose delivery data enabled observation of key characteristics related to each delivery method. For SIR-spheres procedures, the cycle of pushing the dose and visualizing with fluoro can easily be seen with each push resulting in a smaller and smaller peak with intermittent fluoroscopy pulses. TheraSpheres infusions show a rapid bolus with nearly all of the measurable injected activity being infused in the first push of the dose. Staff radiation exposure assessments showed statistically significant differences between glass and resin spheres for hand doses of physicians and technologists (p > 0.05), but no statistical difference between body doses for both products ( p > 0.05 ). Assessments of free Y90 circulating during therapy showed that patients undergoing therapies with resin spheres had post-infusion blood levels that were 120% higher than pre-infusion levels while glass sphere therapy patients only saw a 7% rise in post-infusion blood levels. The coefficients of variation (COVs) across glass sphere measurements pre, during, and post, were only 0.008 while resin sphere measures saw much greater variability with a COV of 0.45. Both glass and resin therapies showed blood levels at 2-4 h post-injection to be similar to levels measured pre-injection. Neither therapy showed any signs of focal aggregation at 2-4 h post-infusion on whole-body PET/CT.

Conclusion: Although glass and resin radioembolization therapies are similar, they both have unique characteristics related to their administration and handling by staff. Understanding the nuances can assist in providing more efficient delivery, better staff education, and reducing radiation exposure to everyone involved with these therapies. The use of near real-time monitoring is feasible and can be used to obtain critical information about the delivery success of a therapy and can inform physicians on their techniques to optimize their practice as well as provide more consistent training to residents.

对Y-90放射栓塞治疗的处理和输送的见解
使用Y-90放射栓塞技术已成为肝癌和导致肝脏病变的转移性疾病治疗的标准工具。由于只有两种批准的放射栓塞治疗形式,尽管确切的国际和部门间程序可能有所不同,但使用程序也相当标准化。多年来较少发表的是两种可用的Y90放射栓塞疗法在输送技术和处理方面的细微差异。本文试图检查的各个方面的交付技术,产品处理,和辐射暴露之间的可用和批准的产品不同。了解这些差异有助于提供更有效的治疗,确认准确的治疗,更明智地处理产品,并改进对医生和其他医院工作人员的培训。方法比较两种市售和批准的放射栓塞装置,以评估现有产品在治疗递送、产品处理以及患者和工作人员的辐射暴露方面的细微但关键的差异。这项工作分为两个部分:(1)治疗递送,(2)辐射安全。通过使用外部辐射探测器系统来评估治疗的递送特性,探测器放置在每个递送系统内部,面向剂量瓶和患者的输出导管上。另外的探测器被放置在病人肝脏附近和脚部顶部来测量四肢。在整个治疗过程中连续获取数据,以收集时间活动曲线(tac),以表征每种治疗。对这些数据进行分析,以评估(a)实时监测辐射是否可以用于在患者离开手术室之前提供准确的残留剂量评估,以及(b)是否可以观察到剂量传递特性,从而改进培训和质量控制。通过分析初始和最终活性峰来确定测量的计数率差异,使用外部检测器TACs计算剩余剂量。通过监测处理每种可用治疗产品的工作人员的辐射暴露情况来评估辐射安全方面。核医学技术人员和介入放射学医师使用标准体剂量计和环剂量计测量每次治疗的体剂量和手剂量。使用上述收集的肝脏和四肢的tac来评估每种治疗是否可以检测到脱靶或浸出的Y90活性。在治疗前、治疗期间和治疗后采集血液,然后在伽马计数器上计数,以评估血液中游离Y90循环的差异。本研究中的每位患者在输注后2-4小时也接受了治疗后全身PET/CT检查,以评估治疗后患者体内循环游离Y90可能导致的聚集性游离Y90沉积。结果实时检测方法计算的药瓶治疗后残留剂量与核医学方法计算的药瓶治疗后残留剂量差异无统计学意义(p < 0.05)。实时收集剂量给药数据能够观察到与每种给药方法相关的关键特征。对于sir球程序,可以很容易地看到推送剂量和荧光可视化的周期,每次推送都会导致间歇性透视脉冲越来越小的峰值。TheraSpheres输注显示出快速注入,几乎所有可测量的注射活性都是在第一次注射剂量时注入的。工作人员辐射暴露评估显示,医生和技术人员的玻璃球和树脂球手部剂量之间存在统计学显著差异(p>0.05),但两种产品的人体剂量之间没有统计学差异(p>0.05)。治疗过程中对游离Y90循环的评估显示,接受树脂球治疗的患者输注后血液水平比输注前高120%,而玻璃球治疗的患者输注后血液水平仅上升7%。玻璃球测量前、期间和之后的变异系数(COV)仅为0.008,而树脂球测量的变异系数(COV)为0.45。玻璃和树脂治疗均显示注射后2-4小时的血液水平与注射前测量的水平相似。两种治疗在输注后2-4小时的全身PET/CT上均未显示任何局灶性聚集的迹象。结论玻璃和树脂放射栓塞治疗方法虽然相似,但在给药和工作人员的操作上都有各自的特点。 了解这些细微差别可以帮助提供更有效的治疗,更好的员工教育,并减少参与这些治疗的每个人的辐射暴露。近实时监测的使用是可行的,可以用来获得有关治疗成功交付的关键信息,并可以告知医生他们的技术,以优化他们的实践,并为住院医生提供更一致的培训。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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