Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: CT guidance may improve precision for diagnostic and therapeutic spinal injections, but it can increase patient radiation dose. This study examined the impact of reducing tube current on patient radiation exposure and the technical success for these procedures, by using axial acquisitions for short scan lengths and eliminating nonessential imaging.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Our institutional review board approved retrospective analysis of records from 100 consecutive outpatients undergoing spinal injections for pain before and after the CT protocol modification to reduce radiation dose. Data collected included patient age and sex, response to injection, number of sites and spinal levels treated, injection type, performing physician, CT acquisition method, number of imaging series, tube current, scan length, and DLP.
RESULTS: Image contrast was reduced with the low-dose protocol, but this did not affect technical success or immediate pain relief. Mean DLP for all procedures decreased from 1458 ± 1022 to 199 ± 101 mGy · cm (P < .001). The range of radiologist-dependent DLP per procedure also was reduced significantly with the modified protocol. Selective nerve root blocks, lumbar injections, multiple injection sites, and the lack of prior imaging were each associated with a slightly higher DLP (<50 mGy · cm).
CONCLUSIONS: Radiation to patients undergoing CT-guided spinal injections can be decreased significantly without affecting outcome by reducing tube current, using axial acquisitions for short scan lengths, and eliminating nonessential imaging guidance. These measures also decrease variability in radiation doses between different practitioners and should be useful for other CT-guided procedures in radiology.
Abbreviations
- ANOVA
- analysis of variance
- CTDIvol
- volume CT dose index
- DLP
- dose-length product
- NA
- not applicable
CT image guidance ensures accurate needle placement to localize and/or treat spinal pain,1 a common medical problem with substantial costs to society.2 In general, CT has an increasing role in interventional radiology. However, there is mounting concern in the medical community3 and general public4 regarding the potential harmful effects of medical radiation exposure. Furthermore, patient radiation doses have shown surprising variability even for the same CT protocol at different institutions.5 Recent editorials have advocated for the development and widespread adoption of more uniform CT acquisitions to reduce both radiation dose and variability.3,6
A number of different strategies have been proposed to reduce CT radiation dose with varying effects on resultant image quality.7,8 Tailoring the acquisition protocol to the diagnostic or interventional goal of the procedure is 1 straightforward approach.9 In the case of spinal injections, 3 observations can be used to design an appropriate protocol for CT guidance. First, when the site of injection is known a priori, it should be possible to target imaging only to the structures of interest. Second, osseous spine anatomy has high inherent contrast such that x-ray tube current throughout the imaging procedure might be reduced. Doses for lumbar CTs in adult patients with suspected disk herniation were reduced 35% in this manner without degrading image quality,10 and experiments in phantoms have predicted substantial dose reductions with lower tube currents during lumbar spine injections.11 Finally, because CT-guided spinal injections require imaging only short lengths along the scanner axis, switching from helical to axial acquisition modes also can reduce the radiation dose from over-ranging.12–14
This study describes the impact of several steps that were taken in our academic practice to reduce patient radiation during CT-guided injection procedures for spinal pain. Specifically, we implemented a protocol by using anatomically targeted survey imaging, lower tube current, and axial acquisitions for short image lengths for all CT-guided spinal injections. We found that these 3 steps achieved substantial reductions in both the radiation to patients and in the variability in patient radiation for procedures performed by different radiologists.
Materials and Methods
Study Design
Our institutional review board approved this study. In March 2010, our neuroradiology section made several modifications to CT protocols for spine interventions to reduce the radiation doses to our patients. Specifically, tube-current and scanning lengths were reduced, and acquisitions were changed from helical to axial for most imaging series. To assess the impact of these measures on radiation reduction, we retrospectively collected data for the first 50 consecutive patients that followed the implementation of these changes. For comparison, we also collected data retrospectively for 50 consecutive patients undergoing procedures in March 2009, 1 year preceding the implementation of the dose-reduction steps.
Patient Selection
All patients undergoing CT-guided epidural, facet joint, nerve root, or medial branch blocks to relieve spinal pain were included. Patients undergoing other CT-guided spinal interventions such as percutaneous biopsy, kyphoplasty, vertebroplasty, and radio-frequency ablation were excluded. Only the first procedure for a patient undergoing multiple procedures in the same year was included (to limit the impact of specific individual factors such as body habitus). Patients also were excluded if the dose report was not available.
Spinal Injections and CT Technique
All spinal injection procedures were performed on the same 64-section CT scanner (LightSpeed VCT; GE Healthcare, Milwaukee, Wisconsin) at a single outpatient facility (rotation time, 0.8 seconds; tube potential, 120 kV; section thickness, 2.5 mm; collimation, 40 cm; and helical pitch and detector coverage, 1.375 and 40 mm, respectively). The noise index was not adjusted. Individual supervising neuroradiologists altered only tube current, scan length, and the CT acquisition method.
Data Collection
Data were collected using the departmental PACS system by reviewing CT images, dose reports, and interpretative reports. Each series of images from a particular study was assigned to 1 of 3 phases: a “survey” phase, consisting of an initial CT acquisition by using a fiducial grid for procedure planning; a “guide” phase, in which multiple image series were acquired as ≥1 needle was advanced to specific anatomic targets for injection; and a “contrast” phase, in which CT was performed to verify correct needle placement following injection of iodinated contrast. The presence or absence of metallic hardware within the region of interest also was recorded because a higher tube current may have been used in these cases to better visualize regional anatomy. The difference between time stamps on the first and last images was used as a surrogate for the total procedural time.
Information collected from the radiology interpretative report included patient sex and age, the supervising attending neuroradiologist (the same 3 neuroradiologists supervised procedures in both years), spinal anatomy treated, number of sites injected, injection type (epidural, facet joint, selective nerve root, or medial branch block), pre- and postprocedure pain assessment, and the dates of available prior cross-sectional imaging for the spinal anatomy being treated. The spinal anatomy was recorded as cervical, thoracic, lumbar or sacral; and transitions were assigned to the superior level (eg, a C7-T1 injection was cervical). Spinal levels were divided by intervertebral disk spaces per standard convention, and each needle used during the procedure was considered a single injection site (eg, an injection of both articulating facets at L4-L5 was recorded as 1 level and 2 sites). Patient-reported pain scales immediately before and after the procedure (rated 0–10, with 0 being no pain) were recorded in the 64/100 patients for whom this information was documented in the radiology report.
The dose report provided a separate acquisition method (helical or axial), scan length in centimeters, tube current in milliamperes, and DLP in milligrays per.centimeter for each imaging series. The scan length for an individual scan series was measured as the sum of all imaged regions along the z-axis without including gaps in cases in which more than a single level was injected. The dose report also provided the total examination DLP. All data were entered into a password-protected database on an encrypted computer. Statistical comparisons used unpaired Student t tests or 1-way ANOVAs with post hoc Tukey tests for significance when differences were found.
Radiation Dose Estimation
This study focused on quantifying reductions to the DLP during CT-guided spinal injections. DLP is the product of scan length and the CTDIvol. The CTDIvol and DLP are precisely defined, reproducible, and conform to industry and regulatory standards.15–18 The DLP (milligrays per centimeter) is often used to estimate the effective dose (millisievert) in adults of standard physique by multiplying the DLP by 0.0059, 0.014, or 0.015 mSv/mGy · cm for the cervical, thoracic, or lumbosacral spine, respectively.19 The accuracy of the estimated effective doses, however, depends on individual patient factors (eg, body habitus). Hence, a reduction in DLP will still correspond to a reduction in a patient's effective dose, but the estimated magnitude of the latter reduction is not as precise.
Results
Images obtained during the different procedural phases in 2010 showed reduced perceived contrast compared with procedural images obtained in 2009, which was attributed to the lower tube current (Fig 1). However, there remained sufficient detail for identifying relevant vertebral anatomy and the positions of fiducials, needles, and iodinated contrast throughout the procedure in all cases. All 100 cases were technically successful for injection of the a priori anatomic target without immediate postprocedural complications. Immediate reduction in patient-reported pain also did not differ between years (Table 1), with 92% of patients reporting at least mild reduction in pain scores.
In 2010, changing most CT acquisitions from helical to axial, reducing tube current, and reducing nonessential imaging (Table 2) lowered the mean total DLP for the procedure by 86% from 1458 ± 1022 to 199 ± 101 mGy · cm (P < .001). The DLP for each phase of the spinal injection procedure also was reduced (Fig 2 A). More than 70% of the total DLP reduction was due to lower mean DLP during the guide phase of the procedure (reduced by 926 mGy · cm in 2010). Per image series, the DLP during the guide phase was reduced by >95% from 86 ± 51 to 3 ± 3 mGy · cm from 2009 to 2010 (P < .001). This corresponded to an 82% reduction in minimum tube current for an individual image series during the guide phase (P < .001) (Table 2). Furthermore, the number of imaging series required to advance the needle to the target decreased from 12.3 ± 5.8 in 2009 to 9.7 ± 5.4 in 2010 (P = .022). Overall, the extent to which different phases of the examination contributed to overall patient radiation changed (Fig 3) so that in 2010 the survey phase of the examination now contributed the largest component to the total patient effective dose (75%) for the procedure.
Most patients (79%) underwent cervical or lumbar-only CT-guided injections for neck or lower back pain, respectively. Both of these groups showed similar DLP reductions between 2009 and 2010 (Fig 2B, -C). In 2009, cervical-only procedures had a 70% higher guide-phase DLP than lumbar-only procedures (P < .04), corresponding to a higher mean total examination DLP of 476 mGy · cm (P < .0001). Most of the DLP difference can be attributed to use of higher tube current in cervical procedures during 2009; for example, the minimum tube current for an image series obtained during the guide phase was 175% higher (P < .001) (Table 2). The difference in DLP between cervical and lumbar procedures in 2009, however, was not observed in 2010. Besides the global reductions in tube current and DLP for all phases of the examination, there also was a 40% decrease in the scan length of the survey phase for cervical-only procedures from 90.9 ± 30.9 to 56.6 ± 20.3 mm (P = .088) (Table 2).
Radiation-dose reductions were consistent for epidural, facet, or selective nerve root blocks (Fig 4). Compared with all other injection types studied, selective nerve root blocks had higher total examination DLPs in both 2009 and 2010 (P = .004). In 2010, these total DLP differences were attributed to higher tube current (159.5 versus 59.5 mA, P = .0063) and higher DLP (170.4 versus 57.2 mGy · cm, P = .0045) during the survey phase, as well as higher tube current (61 versus 18.2 mA, P = .0149) during the contrast phase. There was a trend toward increased tube current during the guide phase as well (P = .121). These differences were predicted because needle placement for selective nerve root blocks requires visualization of more detailed soft-tissue anatomy compared with other CT-guided spinal injections (which appears to have been accomplished with increased tube current). The DLP for other injection types studied did not differ statistically.
Radiation dose for CT-guided spinal injections showed significant reductions under the supervision of all 3 attending neuroradiologists from 2009 to 2010 (P < .002, all comparisons) (Fig 5). Radiologist-dependent variability in total DLP decreased substantially as well; the largest mean DLP difference between supervising neuroradiologists decreased 95% from 1776 mGy · cm in 2009 to 94 mGy · cm in 2010.
Dose reduction persisted even when total procedure DLP was normalized to the number of spinal levels or sites injected (Fig 6). Alternatively, single- and multiple-injection-site procedures can be compared. In 36 of the 100 patients during 2009–2010, only 1 site was injected; as expected, these procedures took significantly less time (33.4 minutes versus 50.4 minutes) and supervising neuroradiologists chose shorter scan lengths for survey images (78.1 versus 108.3 mm) compared with multiple-site injections (both comparisons, P < .0001). There also was a trend toward lower total examination DLP, with 1-site injections in 2010 (166.2 versus 216.9 mGy · cm, P = .089) not present in the 2009 group or combined data. The absolute difference in DLP for 2010 between single- and multiple-site injections (50.7 mGy · cm) was 25-fold smaller than the overall reduction in DLP between 2009 and 2010 (1259 mGy · cm).
Helical acquisitions were used in both years for the survey phase; however, axial replaced helical acquisitions for the guide phase of all procedures and the contrast phase of most procedures (36 of 50) in 2010. Notably, DLP was significantly higher for the 14 procedures for which helical acquisitions were still used during the contrast phase (35.8 ± 19.6 versus 5.7 ± 4.4 mGy · cm; ANOVA, P < .001).
Prior cross-sectional imaging of the relevant spinal anatomy within the previous year was available for 36 and 39 patients in 2009 and 2010, respectively. In 2010, higher maximum tube current was used for the guide phase in patients without imaging during the previous year (58.9 ± 38.4 versus 41.5 ± 22.0 mA, P = .058). These patients also had higher mean total DLP (216.8 ± 119.3 versus 193.5 ± 96.4 mGy · cm), but the difference was not significant (P = .505). Otherwise, the availability of prior imaging did not appear to affect procedure time or supervising neuroradiologists' other choices for the CT acquisition. Procedures in the few patients with hardware (19/100) also trended toward increased total DLP (1118 versus 760 mGy · cm, P = .144) due to significantly increased tube current selected during the guide phase (195.5 versus 117.8 mA, P = .009).
Discussion
In early 2010, we attempted to aggressively reduce patient radiation during CT-guided spine injections by decreasing tube current for each phase of the procedure, switching short image length acquisitions from helical to axial, and minimizing the scan lengths and series used. Supervising neuroradiologists remained free to alter CT acquisitions on the basis of their clinical judgment, and there was no concurrent monitoring. Compared with 2009, these changes led to a dramatic 86% reduction in total DLP per CT-guided spine injection procedure in 2010 (Fig 2, P < .001).
Image contrast remained adequate for precise location of fiducials, needles, and relevant anatomy (Fig 1). Supervising neuroradiologists noted that undiluted contrast injection also reduced tube-current requirements for confirming the appropriate needle position. Although long-term outcomes were not assessed in this study, all procedures were technically successful without complications, and there were no differences between pre- and postprocedure pain scores (Table 1). In 2010, however, CT-guided spinal injections were successful with estimated effective doses as low as 0.17 mSv (Fig 7), a dose that is equivalent or lower than has been reported for fluoroscopy-guided procedures.20,21 Mean estimated effective doses for cervical-only or lumbar-only spine injections were reduced in 2010 to 1.1 and 3.3 mSv, respectively. Radiation-dose reductions between 2009 and 2010 also were consistent for epidural, facet block, and selective nerve root blocks (Fig 4) or when normalized for the number of sites or levels injected (Fig 6).
With the short image lengths used during the procedures (generally <10 cm), particularly during the guide and contrast phases, helical acquisitions increased radiation dose from over-ranging.12–14 Hence, switching to an axial acquisition during these phases also contributed significantly to dose reductions. This was best illustrated by decreased DLP observed during the contrast phase of 2010 examinations when axial and helical acquisitions were compared directly. Procedure DLPs were further reduced by 21% fewer image series and 40% decreased image length for cervical-only procedures (Table 2). Overall, the changes implemented affected the guide phase most, in which 70% of the observed total radiation reduction occurred.
This study highlighted the fact that there can be substantial radiologist-dependent variability in patient radiation during CT-guided procedures (Fig 5). Using the proposed dose-reduction strategy, differences in DLP between the highest and lowest supervising neuroradiologists were reduced 95% from 1776 mGy · cm in 2009 to 94 mGy · cm in 2010. The reduced variability in radiologist-dependent procedural radiation came without mandates or monitoring and meets recent proposals that doses for CT protocols become more consistent and independent of particular supervising neuroradiologists and/or institutions.3,6
A secondary aim of this study was to identify additional patient or procedural features that alter supervising neuroradiologists' choices of CT acquisition parameters and hence affect patient dose. Male sex, selective nerve root blocks, lumbar level injections, multiple injection sites, or absence of imaging within the previous year appeared to increase patient radiation. However, these factors were not additive, and the increased DLP observed for any individual factor only ranged between 23.3 and 50.7 mGy · cm in 2010 (the latter only increases the effective dose by 0.7 mSv in lumbar spine injections).
This retrospective study had some limitations. The study was not randomized, and the patient groups before and after implementing the dose-reduction strategies differed in some respects (Table 1). Specifically, in 2010, a greater proportion of patients were male and a smaller number had metallic spinal hardware. Moreover, patients in 2010 had more lumbar and fewer cervical injections than those in 2009. Furthermore, as a retrospective study, other factors that could alter the real-time choice of scan parameters such as body habitus could not be assessed. This study was designed to examine radiation dose reductions for CT-guided spinal injections and did not compare radiation doses between fluoroscopy and these injections.10 Fluoroscopy-guided spinal injections are performed by different specialists at our institution. The accurate estimation of radiation from fluoroscopy procedures also is not simple.
Conclusions
Patient radiation from CT-guided spinal procedures decreased significantly without affecting the technical success of the procedure by reducing tube current, switching to axial acquisitions for short scan lengths, and eliminating nonessential imaging. Most optimization came from decreased contributions during the guide phase (when the needle was advanced to its anatomic target). Procedural DLP showed substantial variability, depending on the supervising neuroradiologist, and was reduced by 95% after implementation of this dose-reduction strategy. The radiation reductions observed should be valid for other CT-guided procedures in radiology. Adding anatomy or attenuation-based tube-current modulation,22–24 noise-reduction algorithms,25 and/or tube-voltage reductions in nonobese patients26 may further reduce patient radiation doses. Prospective studies also may identify other patient and procedural characteristics that affect patient doses during CT-guided procedures.
Acknowledgments
The authors appreciate assistance from radiology technologists John Jang and Susan Williams.
Footnotes
-
T.M.S. was funded through National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering T32 EB001631–05. C.P.H. is funded by the GE Radiology Research Academic Fellowship program.
-
Paper previously presented at: Annual Meeting of the Western Neuroradiological Society, September 28 to October 2, 2010; Wailea, Hawaii.
Indicates open access to non-subscribers at www.ajnr.org
References
- Received November 24, 2010.
- Accepted after revision February 23, 2011.
- © 2011 by American Journal of Neuroradiology