Department of Radiation Oncology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
Division of Hematology and Oncology, Department of Pediatrics, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
Pediatr Blood Cancer. 2022 Dec;69(12):e29996. doi: 10.1002/pbc.29996. Epub 2022 Sep 14.
There is growing interest among pediatric institutions for implementing iodine-131 (I-131) meta-iodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) therapy for treating children with high-risk neuroblastoma. Due to regulations on the medical use of radioactive material (RAM), and the complexity and safety risks associated with the procedure, a multidisciplinary team involving radiation therapy/safety experts is required. Here, we describe methods for implementing pediatric I-131 MIBG therapy and evaluate our program's robustness via failure modes and effects analysis (FMEA).
We formed a multidisciplinary team, involving pediatric oncology, radiation oncology, and radiation safety staff. To evaluate the robustness of the therapy workflow and quantitatively assess potential safety risks, an FMEA was performed. Failure modes were scored (1-10) for their risk of occurrence (O), severity (S), and being undetected (D). Risk priority number (RPN) was calculated from a product of these scores and used to identify high-risk failure modes.
A total of 176 failure modes were identified and scored. The majority (94%) of failure modes scored low (RPN <100). The highest risk failure modes were related to training and to drug-infusion procedures, with the highest S scores being (a) caregivers did not understand radiation safety training (O = 5.5, S = 7, D = 5.5, RPN = 212); (b) infusion training of staff was inadequate (O = 5, S = 8, D = 5, RPN = 200); and (c) air in intravenous lines/not monitoring for air in lines (O = 4.5, S = 8, D = 5, RPN = 180).
Through use of FMEA methodology, we successfully identified multiple potential points of failure that have allowed us to proactively mitigate risks when implementing a pediatric MIBG program.
越来越多的儿科机构对实施碘-131(I-131)间碘苄胍(MIBG)治疗高危神经母细胞瘤患儿的治疗方法产生了兴趣。由于放射性材料(RAM)的医用法规,以及该程序的复杂性和安全风险,需要一个涉及放射治疗/安全专家的多学科团队。在这里,我们描述了实施小儿 I-131 MIBG 治疗的方法,并通过失效模式和影响分析(FMEA)评估了我们的方案的稳健性。
我们成立了一个多学科团队,包括儿科肿瘤学、放射肿瘤学和放射安全人员。为了评估治疗工作流程的稳健性并定量评估潜在的安全风险,我们进行了 FMEA。对失效模式的发生风险(O)、严重程度(S)和未检测到的风险(D)进行了 1-10 的评分。风险优先级数(RPN)由这些评分的乘积计算得出,用于识别高风险失效模式。
共确定了 176 个失效模式并进行了评分。大多数失效模式评分较低(RPN<100),占 94%。风险最高的失效模式与培训和药物输注程序有关,评分最高的失效模式为:(a)护理人员不理解辐射安全培训(O=5.5,S=7,D=5.5,RPN=212);(b)员工的输注培训不足(O=5,S=8,D=5,RPN=200);和(c)静脉输液中出现空气/未监测到输液管中有空气(O=4.5,S=8,D=5,RPN=180)。
通过使用 FMEA 方法,我们成功地确定了多个潜在的失效点,这使我们能够在实施小儿 MIBG 计划时主动降低风险。