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Managing Patients With Unlabeled Passive Implants on MR Systems Operating Below 1.5 T

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jmri.29002

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magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); MRI safety; implants; radiofrequency (RF) fields

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The standard of care for patients with implants is to determine the safety of scanning based on the field strength of the MRI scanner. However, facilities with scanners operating below 1.5T face challenges when encountering patients with implants, as scanning them is considered off-label. This monograph provides an overview of the safety issues related to passive implants and offers recommendations for managing patients with implants labeled MR Conditional at 1.5T and/or 3T on scanners operating below 1.5T.
The standard of care for managing a patient with an implant is to identify the item and to assess the relative safety of scanning the patient. Because the 1.5 T MR system is the most prevalent scanner in the world and 3 T is the highest field strength in widespread use, implants typically have MR Conditional (i.e., an item with demonstrated safety in the MR environment within defined conditions) labeling at 1.5 and/or 3 T only. This presents challenges for a facility that has a scanner operating at a field strength below 1.5 T when encountering a patient with an implant, because scanning the patient is considered off-label. In this case, the supervising physician is responsible for deciding whether to scan the patient based on the risks associated with the implant and the benefit of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). For a passive implant, the MRI safety-related concerns are static magnetic field interactions (i.e., force and torque) and radiofrequency (RF) field-induced heating. The worldwide utilization of scanners operating below 1.5 T combined with the increasing incidence of patients with implants that need MRI creates circumstances that include patients potentially being subjected to unsafe imaging conditions or being denied access to MRI because physicians often lack the knowledge to perform an assessment of risk vs. benefit. Thus, physicians must have a complete understanding of the MRI-related safety issues that impact passive implants when managing patients with these products on scanners operating below 1.5 T. This monograph provides an overview of the various clinical MR systems operating below 1.5 T and discusses the MRI-related factors that influence safety for passive implants. Suggestions are provided for the management of patients with passive implants labeled MR Conditional at 1.5 and/or 3 T, referred to scanners operating below 1.5 T. The purpose of this information is to empower supervising physicians with the essential knowledge to perform MRI exams confidently and safely in patients with passive implants.

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