TG100 Flashcards

1
Q

where do many of the failures in radiation oncology occur?

A

errors in workflow and process

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2
Q

what is TG100?

A

application of risk analysis methods to radiation therapy quality management

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3
Q

FMEA

A

failure modes and effects analysis

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4
Q

issue with work practises in individual clinics

A

very variable
not like linacs where there are some standard designs and you can prescribe QA
-have to analyze processes and develop clinic and site specific quality management programs that affect work practises in individual clinics

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5
Q

techniques used in TG100

A

process mapping
FMEA
fault tree analysis

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6
Q

3 things included in TG100

A

(1) the rationale for prospective risk analysis; (2) how to perform process- and clinic-specific risk analysis and quality management program formulation; and (3) a detailed sample application of the method applied to a generic IMRT process

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7
Q

does TG100 recommend making sudden big changes to workflow after the analysis?

A

No, discuss with experts and team first

make sure still compliant with regulations

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8
Q

4 recommendations of TG100

A
  • Don’t make sudden large changes to workflow due to results of analysis
  • Start with a small project
  • Use redundancy
  • Quality department at the clinic can likely provide help
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9
Q

What is linked to serious errors in some radiation therapy accidents?

A

mental and physical overload

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10
Q

what is not meeting the desired level of quality?

A

failure

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11
Q

definition of quality

A

Those features which meet the needs of the patient,including rational medical, psychological, and eco-nomic goals while also taking into account the profes-sional and economic needs of the caregivers and theinstitution.
•A clinical process that is designed to realize cancer treat-ments that conform with nationally accepted standardsof practice and specifications; and
•Freedom from errors and mistakes

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12
Q

define error

A

failures consisting of acts, either of commission(doing something that should not have been done)or omission (not doing something that should have been done), that incorrectly execute the intended action required by the process

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13
Q

define mistakes

A

failures due to incorrect intentions or plans, such that even if executed as intended would not achieve the goal

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14
Q

define violations

A

failures due to intentionally not followingproper procedures, either as shortcuts with the intentionof achieving the correct goal or sabotage

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15
Q

define event

A

the entire scenario, including the failure it-self and its propagation through the clinical pro-cess, resulting in a patient treatment of diminished quality

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16
Q

define near-event

A

a situation resulting from a failure that would have compromised quality of the patient’s treat-ment had it not been detected and corrected. Also known as close call, near miss, and good catch

17
Q

types of failures

A

human
equipment
organizational or design (latent)

18
Q

risk mangement

A

systematic application of management policies, procedures, and practices to the tasks of analyzing,evaluating, and controlling risk

19
Q

risk assessment

A

considers the way in which the quality of treatments can fail to achieve the desired goals

20
Q

4 components of quality management

A

quality planning
quality control
quality assurance
quality improvement

21
Q

difference between QC and QA

A

QC maintains integrity of process
QA provides confidence that the output of the process is correct

i.e. QC is about input and QA about outpout

for example, QC failure would be not realizing a system is using the wrong calculation algorithm. QA failure would be not seeing that the calculated result is incorrect

QC usually requires more resources than QA

22
Q

RCA

A

root cause analysis
reactive approach to safety (once an incident occured or almost occurred)
-focuses on systems and processes rather than individual blame

23
Q

safety barriers

A

critical control points

any process steps whose primary function is to prevent errors or mistakes from occurring or propagating through the radiotherapy workflow

24
Q

prospective risk analysis

A

goal is to identify risky process steps before a failure happens

25
Q

overview of FMEA

A

it moves through the process and considers, for each step, what could fail, how it could fail, what is the likelihood of failure, what is the likelihood that a failure would not be detected, and what the effects of failure would be. The overall risk of each identified failure mode is then scored, so that these failure modes can be prioritized

26
Q

overview of fault tree analysis

A

evaluates the propagation of failures

27
Q

order of steps in TG 100

A
  • process mapping
  • FMEA assess all potential risks
  • FTA evaluates propagation of failures
  • QM program is developed based on how to best avoid the faults and risks identified
28
Q

the team for TG-100

A

multi-disciplinary

29
Q

three parameters in FMEA

A
  • O(occurrence) describes the likelihood that a particular cause for the specified failure mode exists.
  • S(severity) describes the severity of the effect on the final process outcome resulting from the failure mode if it is not detected or corrected.
  • D(lack of detectability) describes the likelihood that the failure will not be detected in time to prevent an event.

they range from 1-10

While past experience with QC or patient outcome studies might be available to guide the choice of the value for D, its selection will rely largely on expert opinion

30
Q

RPN

A

Risk priority number in FMEA

RPN = OSD

31
Q

ranges of OSD

A

Oranges from 1 (failure unlikely,<0.01%) to 10 (failure likelihood is substantial, more than 5% of the time).
•S ranges from 1 (no danger, minimal disturbance of clinical routine) to 10 (catastrophic, whether from a single event or accumulated events)
•D ranges from 1 (very detectable: 0.01% or fewer of the events go undetected throughout treatment) to 10 (very hard to detect,>20% of the failures persist through the treatment course).

32
Q

as S increases, what happens to D?

A

typically more severe issues (such as horrid coverage) become more likely to be detected)

33
Q

ranking of QM tools from most effective to least effective

A

most effective: forcing functions and constraints (interlocks)

  1. automation
  2. protocols (i.e. checklists)
  3. independent double-checks and other redundancies
  4. rules and policies
  5. education
34
Q

common themes on safety and quality in RO

A

training, documen-tation, communication, and both reactive and prospective approaches to error management

35
Q

dominant cause of failure

A

human failure

36
Q

highest ranking hazard in TG100 IMRT example

A

incorrect interpretation of a pre-treatment disgnostic image for defining the GTV

-peer review is most effective QM step

2nd highest ranked hazard was bad delineation of GTV (similar issue)

37
Q

key quality compoennets identified

A

-Standardized procedures.
•Adequate training of staff.
•Clear lines of communication among staff.
-Maintenance of hardware and software resources.
•Adequate staff, physical and computer resources.