» Articles » PMID: 9469340

Error Rates in Clinical Radiotherapy

Overview
Journal J Clin Oncol
Specialty Oncology
Date 1998 Feb 20
PMID 9469340
Citations 18
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Purpose: Error rates in clinical oncology are undergoing increasing scrutiny. The purpose of this study was to understand error frequency, error patterns, underlying causal links, consequences, and possible prevention strategies in clinical radiotherapy.

Patients And Methods: Treatment information, self-reported error documentation, and retrospective analyses of electronic treatment verification transcripts for 1,925 consecutive patients treated with a total of 93,332 individual radiotherapy fields were reviewed and analyzed.

Results: A total of 59 separate errors that affected 168 individual treatment fields were detected, which yielded a crude radiation delivery error rate of 0.18%. All 59 errors were judged to be level I (negligible chance of adverse medical outcome) with the most common error category being a minor treatment field block misplacement. A comprehensive quality assurance program and an electronic record-and-verify linear accelerator interlock system seem to have prevented the occurrence of many additional errors. However, nine of the 59 errors were directly related to the use of this system and generally involved the transposition of similar numbers within series of treatment coordinate data-sets. Overall, radiotherapy error rates favorably compare with reported error rates for pharmaceutical administration in large tertiary care hospitals.

Conclusion: When modern automated error-minimization methods are used along with nonpunitive error reporting systems, clinical radiotherapy seems to be highly safe. Formal error analysis studies may allow the rational design of prevention strategies that are attuned to the frequency, seriousness, and antecedent causes of many classes of potential radiotherapy errors.

Citing Articles

Exploring Barriers in Self-Reporting of Errors and Near Misses: A Cross-Sectional Study on Radiation Oncology in Saudi Arabia.

Alahmad H, Alshahrani A, Alenazi K, Alarifi M, Abanomy A, Alhulail A J Multidiscip Healthc. 2024; 17:4709-4719.

PMID: 39399326 PMC: 11471081. DOI: 10.2147/JMDH.S481686.


Quality improvements in radiation oncology clinical trials.

Smith K, Ulin K, Knopp M, Kry S, Xiao Y, Rosen M Front Oncol. 2023; 13:1015596.

PMID: 36776318 PMC: 9911211. DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2023.1015596.


Multi-Institutional Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy Incident Learning: Evaluation of Safety Barriers Using a Human Factors Analysis and Classification System.

McGurk R, Woch Naheedy K, Kosak T, Hobbs A, Mullins B, Paradis K J Patient Saf. 2022; 19(1):e18-e24.

PMID: 35948321 PMC: 9771927. DOI: 10.1097/PTS.0000000000001071.


An Investigation of Radiation Treatment Learning Opportunities in Relation to the Radiation Oncology Electronic Medical Record: A Single Institution Experience.

Huang Y, Sarkar V, Paxton A, Zhao H, Su F, Price R Adv Radiat Oncol. 2021; 7(1):100812.

PMID: 34805621 PMC: 8581278. DOI: 10.1016/j.adro.2021.100812.


Impact of technological and departmental changes on incident rates in radiation oncology over a seventeen-year period.

Le Cornu E, Murray S, Brown E, Bernard A, Shih F, Ferrari-Anderson J J Med Radiat Sci. 2021; 68(4):356-363.

PMID: 34053193 PMC: 8655886. DOI: 10.1002/jmrs.517.