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UPDATE: VA SUSPENDS PROSTATE CANCER TREATMENTS
AT FOUR HOSPITALS -- Nuclear Regulatory
Commission will
now oversee VA's prostate cancer radiation
program.
For background on this story (with backlinks),
click here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/08/nf08
/nfsep08/nf091008-6.htm
Story here...
http://www.govexe
c.com/dailyfed/1008/101508kp1.htm
Story below:
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-------------------------
VA suspends prostate cancer treatment programs at
four hospitals
By Katherine McIntire Peters
kpeters@govexec.com
After a months-long inquiry into why dozens of prostate cancer treatment
patients at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Philadelphia received
lower-than-prescribed radiation doses, VA has suspended similar treatment
programs at three other hospitals.
The three additional VA hospitals to suspend brachytherapy programs, in
which radioactive seeds are implanted into the prostate, are in
Cincinnati; Jackson, Miss.; and Washington. Those hospitals were found to
have similar problems as those in Philadelphia, where the treatment
program was suspended this summer.
News of the suspensions came from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, which
has launched a special inspection of VA's radiation treatment program. VA
spokeswoman Laurie Tranter said she could not say when the programs were
suspended, how patients were notified, or why the problems might have
occurred.
The
agency planned to put out a press release late Wednesday or Thursday, she
said. Until then she said she was not permitted to provide any details
about the decision.
On Wednesday, NRC sent a letter to the Veterans Affairs National Health
Physics Program documenting commitments made by VA to identify and address
problems that have led to the medical errors and prevent their recurrence.
NRC will oversee VA operations to ensure the agency follows through on
commitments to:
* Conduct inspections at all 13 hospitals authorized to perform prostate
cancer treatment.
* Develop and implement standardized treatment procedures.
* Identify causes of medical events and implement corrective actions.
* Suspend any treatment program where 20 percent or more treatments have
been identified as medical events.
* Conduct an inspection to confirm all necessary corrective actions have
been taken prior to restarting any treatment program.
* Notify NRC of plans to restart programs.
* Conduct an inspection of new prostate cancer treatment programs to
confirm they meet enhanced standards.
"Facilities that use nuclear materials for medical treatment have a
responsibility for administering treatments properly and safely," said
James Caldwell, who heads up NRC's regional office in Lisle, Ill., which
licenses VA's radiation treatment program.
Problems with the agency's prostate cancer treatment program first came to
NRC's attention last May when VA's National Health Physics Program
notified the regulatory body that a radiation dose delivered to a patient
at the Philadelphia facility was less than 80 percent of what had been
prescribed. The National Health Physics Program provides regulatory
oversight for all radiation programs throughout the Veterans Affairs
medical system.
A VA investigation subsequently found that 55 out of 112 prostate cancer
treatment patients at the facility were underdosed between February 2002
and June 2008. Those findings triggered a special inspection by NRC.
The commission's investigation involves conducting independent inspections
at several VA hospitals and evaluating the National Health Physics
Program's response to the medical events.
NRC also has hired an independent medical consultant to examine possible
health effects to patients.
Other VA hospitals that have prostate cancer treatment programs are
located in Albany, N.Y.; Boston; Brooklyn, N.Y.; Durham, N.C.; Los
Angeles; Minneapolis, Minn.; Richmond, Va.; San Francisco; and Seattle.
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