Mann April, DiDea Mario, Fournier France, Tempesta Daniel, Williams Jessica, LaFrance Norman
Hartford Healthcare Corporation, Hartford, Connecticut
Montefiore Medical Center, New York, New York.
J Nucl Med Technol. 2018 Jun;46(2):89-95. doi: 10.2967/jnmt.118.210948. Epub 2018 May 3.
As the health care environment continues to change and morph into a system focusing on increased quality and evidence-based outcomes, nuclear medicine technologists must be reminded that they play a critical role in achieving high-quality, interpretable images used to drive patient care, treatment, and best possible outcomes. A survey performed by the Quality Committee of the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging Technologist Section demonstrated that a clear knowledge gap exists among technologists regarding their understanding of quality, how it is measured, and how it should be achieved by all practicing technologists regardless of role and education level. Understanding of these areas within health care, in conjunction with the growing emphasis on evidence-based outcomes, quality measures, and patient satisfaction, will ultimately elevate the role of nuclear medicine technologists today and into the future. The nuclear medicine role now requires technologists to demonstrate patient assessment skills, practice safety procedures with regard to staff and patients, provide patient education and instruction, and provide physicians with information to assist with the interpretation and outcome of the study. In addition, the technologist must be able to evaluate images by performing technical analysis, knowing the demonstrated anatomy and pathophysiology, and assessing overall quality. Technologists must also be able to triage and understand the disease processes being evaluated and how nuclear medicine diagnostic studies may drive care and treatment. Therefore, it is imperative that nuclear medicine technologists understand their role in the achievement of a high-quality, interpretable study by applying quality principles and understanding and using imaging techniques beyond just basic protocols for every type of disease or system being imaged. This article focuses on quality considerations related to ventilation-perfusion imaging. It provides insight on appropriate imaging techniques and protocols, true imaging variants and tracer distributions versus artifacts that may result in a lower-quality or misinterpreted study, and the use of SPECT and SPECT/CT as an alternative providing a high-quality, interpretable study with better diagnostic accuracy and fewer nondiagnostic procedures than historical planar imaging.
随着医疗保健环境不断变化并演变成一个注重提高质量和基于证据的结果的系统,必须提醒核医学技术人员,他们在获取用于推动患者护理、治疗及实现最佳可能结果的高质量、可解读图像方面发挥着关键作用。核医学与分子影像技术人员协会质量委员会进行的一项调查表明,技术人员在对质量的理解、质量如何衡量以及所有执业技术人员(无论其角色和教育水平如何)应如何实现质量方面存在明显的知识差距。了解医疗保健领域的这些方面,再加上对基于证据的结果、质量指标和患者满意度的日益重视,最终将提升核医学技术人员如今及未来的作用。如今核医学的角色要求技术人员展示患者评估技能,实施针对工作人员和患者的安全程序,提供患者教育和指导,并为医生提供信息以协助解读检查结果和得出结论。此外,技术人员必须能够通过进行技术分析、了解所显示的解剖结构和病理生理学以及评估整体质量来评估图像。技术人员还必须能够进行分类并理解所评估的疾病过程以及核医学诊断研究如何推动护理和治疗。因此,核医学技术人员必须通过应用质量原则并理解和使用超越每种成像疾病或系统基本方案的成像技术,来理解他们在实现高质量、可解读研究中的作用。本文重点关注与通气灌注成像相关的质量考量。它提供了有关适当成像技术和方案、真正的成像变异以及示踪剂分布与可能导致研究质量较低或解读错误的伪影的见解,以及使用单光子发射计算机断层扫描(SPECT)和SPECT/CT作为一种替代方法,与传统平面成像相比,它能提供具有更高诊断准确性和更少非诊断性程序的高质量、可解读研究。