Florida Administrative Code
64 - DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
64E - Division of Environmental Health
Chapter 64E-5 - CONTROL OF RADIATION HAZARDS
Section 64E-5.507 - Therapeutic X-Ray Systems of Less Than 1 MeV
Universal Citation: FL Admin Code R 64E-5.507
Current through Reg. 50, No. 187; September 24, 2024
(1) Equipment Requirements.
(a) Leakage Radiation. When the tube is
operated at its leakage technique factors, the leakage radiation shall not
exceed the value specified at the distance specified for the following
classification of that x-ray system:
1.
Contact Therapy Systems. Leakage radiation shall not exceed 100 milliroentgens
(25.8 uC per kg) per hour at 5 centimeters from the surface of the tube housing
assembly.
2. Zero to One Hundred
Fifty kVp Systems. Leakage radiation shall not exceed 100 milliroentgens (25.8
uC per kg) in 1 hour at 1 meter from the source.
3. One Hundred Fifty-one to Nine Hundred
Ninety-nine kVp Systems. The leakage radiation shall not exceed 0.1 percent of
the useful beam 1 meter from the source, for any of its operating
conditions.
(b) Permanent
Beam Limiting Devices. Permanent fixed diaphragms or cones used for limiting
the useful beam shall provide the same or a higher degree of protection as
required for the tube housing assembly.
(c) Removable and Adjustable Beam Limiting
Devices.
1. Removable beam limiting devices
shall, for the portion of the useful beam to be blocked by these devices,
transmit not more than 1 percent of the useful beam at the maximum kilovoltage
and maximum treatment filter. This requirement does not apply to auxiliary
blocks or materials placed in the useful beam to shape the useful beam to the
individual patient.
2. Adjustable
beam limiting devices shall transmit not more than 5 percent of the useful beam
at the maximum kilovoltage and with the maximum treatment filter in the useful
beam.
(d) Filter System.
The filter system shall be so designed that:
1. The filters cannot be accidentally
displaced at any possible tube orientation,
2. The radiation at 5 centimeters from the
filter insertion slot opening does not exceed 30 roentgens (7.7 mC per kg) per
hour under any operating conditions,
3. Each filter is marked as to its material
of construction and its thickness. For wedge filters, the wedge angle shall
appear on the wedge or wedge tray; and,
4. A filter indication system shall be used
on all therapy machines using changeable filters. It shall be designed to
permit easy recognition of any added filter in place. The presence or absence
of any filter shall be discernible at the control panel.
(e) Tube Immobilization. The tube housing
assembly shall be capable of being immobilized for stationary
treatments.
(f) Focal Spot Marking.
The tube housing assembly shall be so marked that it is possible to determine
the location of the focal spot to within 5 millimeters, and such marking shall
be readily accessible for use during calibration procedures.
(g) Beam Block. Contact therapy tube housing
assemblies shall have a removable shield of at least 0.5 millimeter lead
equivalency at 100 kVp that can be positioned over the entire useful beam exit
port during periods when the beam is not in use.
(h) Beam Monitor System. Systems of greater
than 150 kVp manufactured after January 1, 1985, shall be provided with a beam
monitor system which:
1. Shall have the
detector of the monitor system interlocked to prevent incorrect positioning,
2. Shall not allow irradiation
until a pre-selected value of exposure has been made at the treatment control
panel,
3. Shall independently
terminate irradiation when the preselected exposure has been reached,
4. Shall be so designed that, in
the event of a system malfunction or electrical power failure, the dose
administered to a patient prior to the system malfunction or power failure can
be accurately determined,
5. Shall
have a display at the control panel from which the dose at a reference point in
soft tissue can be calculated,
6.
Shall have a control panel display which maintains the administered dose
reading until intentionally reset to 0; and,
7. Shall have a control panel display which
does not have scale multiplying factors and utilizes a design such that
increasing dose is displayed by increasing numbers.
(i) Timer.
1. A timer which has a display shall be
provided at the treatment control panel. The timer shall have a pre-set time
selector and an elapsed time indicator.
2. The timer shall be a cumulative timer
which activates with the production of radiation and retains its reading after
irradiation is interrupted or terminated. After irradiation is terminated and
before irradiation can be reinitiated, it shall be necessary to reset the
elapsed time indicator to 0.
3. The
time shall terminate irradiation when a preselected time has elapsed if any
dose monitoring system present has not previously terminated
irradiation.
4. The timer shall
permit accurate presetting and determination of exposure times as short as 1
second.
5. The timer shall not
activate until the shutter is opened when irradiation is controlled by a
shutter mechanism.
(j)
Control Panel Functions. The control panel, in addition to the displays
required in other provisions of this section, shall have:
1. An indication of whether electrical power
is available at the control panel and if activation of the x-ray tube is
possible,
2. An indication of
whether x-rays are being produced,
3. Means for indicating x-ray tube potential
and current,
4. Means for
terminating an exposure at any time; and,
5. A locking device which will prevent
unauthorized use of the x-ray system.
(k) Multiple Tubes. When a control panel may
energize more than one x-ray tube:
1. It shall
be possible to activate only one x-ray tube at any time,
2. There shall be an indication at the
control panel identifying which x-ray tube is energized; and,
3. There shall be an indication at the tube
housing assembly when that tube is energized.
(l) Source-to-Skin Distance (SSD). There
shall be means of determining the SSD to within 1 centimeter.
(m) Low Filtration X-Ray Tubes. Each x-ray
system equipped with a beryllium or other low-filtration window shall be
clearly labeled as such upon the tube housing assembly and at the control
panel.
(2) Facility Design Requirements for X-Ray Systems Operable Above 50 kVp.
(a) Aural Communication. Provision shall be
made for two-way aural communication between the patient and the operator at
the control panel. However, where excessive noise levels or treatment
requirements make aural communication impractical, other methods of
communication shall be used.
(b)
Viewing Systems. Windows, mirrors, closed-circuit television, or an equivalent
system shall be provided to permit continuous observation of the patient during
irradiation and shall be so located that the operator can observe the patient
from the control panel.
(c)
Additional Requirements for X-Ray Systems Operable Above 150 kVp:
1. All protective barriers shall be fixed
except for entrance doors or beam interceptors.
2. The control panel shall be located outside
the treatment room.
3. Interlocks
shall be provided such that all entrance doors must be closed before treatment
can be initiated or continued. If the radiation beam is interrupted by any door
opening:
a. The exposure at a distance of 1
meter from the source shall be reduced to less than 10 milliroentgens (2.58 uC
per kg) per hour; and,
b. It shall
not be possible to restore the machine to operation without closing the door
and reinitiating irradiation by manual action at the control
panel.
4. Treatment rooms
to which access is possible through more than one entrance shall be provided
with flashing warning lights located in a readily observable position near the
outside of all access doors to indicate when the useful beam is
on.
(3) Surveys, Calibrations, Spot-Checks and Operating Procedures.
(a) Surveys.
1. All new facilities, and existing
facilities not previously surveyed, shall have a survey made by, or under the
direction of, a qualified person. In addition, such surveys shall be done after
any change in the facility or equipment which might cause a significant
increase in radiation hazard.
2.
The registrant shall transmit a copy of the survey report to the Department
within 30 days of the receipt of the report.
3. The survey and report shall indicate all
instances where the installation, in the opinion of the qualified person, is in
violation of applicable regulations.
(b) Calibrations.
1. The calibration of an x-ray system shall
be performed at intervals not to exceed 1 year and after any change or
replacement of components which could cause a change in the radiation
output.
2. The calibration of the
radiation output of an x-ray system shall be performed by or under the
direction of a radiological physicist who is physically present at the facility
during such calibration.
3.
Calibration of the radiation output of an x-ray system shall be performed with
a calibrated dosimetry system. The calibration of such system shall be
traceable to a national standard. The system shall have been calibrated within
the preceding 2 years.
4. The
calibration shall be such that the dose at a reference point in soft tissue can
be calculated to within an uncertainty not to exceed 5 percent.
5. The calibration of the x-ray system shall
include, but not be limited to, the following determinations:
a. Verification that the x-ray system is
operating in compliance with the design specifications,
b. The exposure rates as a function of field
size, technique factors, filter and treatment distance used,
c. The degree of congruence between the
radiation field and the field indicated by the localizing device if such device
is present; and,
d. An evaluation
of the uniformity of the largest radiation field used.
6. Records of calibration shall be maintained
by the registrant for 5 years after completion of the calibration.
7. A copy of the most recent x-ray system
calibration shall be available at the facility for inspection by the
Department.
(c)
Spot-Checks. Spot-checks shall be performed on x-ray systems operable at
greater than 150 kVp. Such spot-checks shall meet the following requirements:
1. The spot-check procedures shall be in
writing and shall have been developed by a radiological physicist.
2. If a radiological physicist does not
perform the spot-check measurement, the results of the spot-check measurements
shall be reviewed by a radiological physicist within 15 days.
3. The spot-check procedures shall specify
the frequency at which tests or measurements are to be performed. The
spot-check procedures shall specify that the spot-check shall be performed
during the calibration specified in paragraph (3)(b), above. The acceptable
tolerance for each parameter measured in the spot-check when compared to the
value for that parameter determined in the calibration specified in paragraph
(3)(a), above, shall be stated.
4.
The cause for a parameter exceeding a tolerance set by the radiological
physicist shall be investigated and corrected before the system is used for
patient irradiation.
5. Whenever a
spot-check indicates a significant change in the operating characteristics of a
system, the system shall be recalibrated as required in paragraph (3)(b),
above.
6. Records of spot-check
measurements and any necessary corrective actions shall be maintained by the
registrant for 2 years.
7. Where a
spot-check involves a radiation measurement, such measurement shall be obtained
using a system satisfying the requirements of paragraph (3)(b), above, or which
has been compared within the previous year with a system meeting those
requirements.
(d)
Operating Procedures.
1. X-ray systems shall
not be left unattended unless the system is secured against unauthorized
use.
2. When a patient must be held
in position for radiation therapy, mechanical supporting or restraining devices
shall be used.
3. The tube housing
assembly shall not be held by hand during operation unless the system is
designed to require such holding and the peak tube potential of the system does
not exceed 50 kVp. In such cases, the holder shall wear protective gloves and
apron of not less than 0.5 millimeter lead equivalency at 100 kVp.
4. No individual other than the patient shall
be in the treatment room unless such individual is protected by a barrier
sufficient to meet the requirements of Rule
64E-5.304, F.A.C. No individual
other than the patient shall be in the treatment room during exposures from
x-ray systems operating above 150 kVp.
5. Machines capable of having an output of
more than 1, 000 roentgens (258 mC per kg) per minute at any accessible place
shall not be left unattended without the power being shut off at the disconnect
switch in addition to the control panel
switch.
Rulemaking Authority 404.051, 404.081, 404.141, 404.22 FS. Law Implemented 404.022, 404.051(1), (4), (5), (6), 404.081(1), 404.22(1), (3) FS.
New 7-17-85, Amended 1-1-94, Formerly 10D-91.608.
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