A new study reinforces earlier work suggesting that MRI scans are
safe for patients with older devices, even if the MRI is focusing on
the chest area.
Until now, the sensitive electronics of older pacemakers and
implantable defibrillators were thought to be vulnerable to
disruption when subjected to the magnetic fields and radio waves
that allow magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI, to see into the body.
The new study in The New England Journal of Medicine “confirms that
pretty much anybody who has a pacemaker or implanted defibrillator
can, with very few restrictions, safely get an MRI scan if they need
it," as long as the devices are properly adjusted before the scan
and safeguards are in place, coauthor Dr. Henry Halperin, professor
of medicine, radiology and biomedical engineering at Johns Hopkins
University in Baltimore, told Reuters Health in a telephone
interview.
To prevent problems, the researchers reprogrammed the devices to
adopt a standard heart rhythm for people whose hearts won't beat on
their own and disabled functions that might cause the pacemaker to
fire improperly if the MRI produced erratic signals in the heart.
After the MRI, the devices were returned to their original settings.
Only newer devices designated as "MRI-conditional" have been
considered safe by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The vast
majority in use - about 6 million worldwide - do not have that
designation. A 2005 analysis estimated that at least half of those
patients will someday need an MRI.
The U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), which
administers the Medicare insurance program for the elderly and
disabled, will only pay for MRI scans in patients with "MRI-conditional"
devices, coauthor Dr. Saman Nazarian, of the University of
Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, told Reuters Health in an
email.
Given the results of the new study and an earlier one published in
February, which also showed the older devices to be safe, "it's hard
to understand the position" of the CMS, said Nazarian, a cardiac
electrophysiologist.
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In that February study, a separate team of researchers reported in
The New England Journal that no serious problems were seen in 1,318
patients with a pacemaker or implantable defibrillator who received
an MRI. But in those cases, the chest area wasn't scanned by the
MRI.
In the new tests by the Nazarian-Halperin team, about 200 of the
1,509 pacemaker and defibrillator patients had their chest scanned
with a 1.5 Tesla MRI. Neither the chest scans nor the scans done
elsewhere in the body produced significant problems, said Dr.
Halperin.
Nine of the devices were disrupted but reset themselves to a backup
mode. In all but one case, the effect was temporary. There was one
instance where the device had to be replaced, but it had a low
battery and could not be properly reprogrammed.
Thus, a nearly-dead battery is probably one of the few reasons not
to have an MRI, Dr. Halperin said. "Pacemakers do funny things when
the battery is low."
In five instances, doctors halted the MRI exam. In one case, the
heart rate fell to under 40 beats per minute. In another, the
patient's heartbeat became too rapid. In the remaining three, the
doctors decided that an MRI probably wouldn't produce a useful image
anyway.
Dr. Halperin said pacemakers and defibrillators cleared by the FDA
since the 2000s are much better protected from the magnetic and
radio waves of an MRI. "And we program them to avoid most any
problems that might happen."
Dr. Nazarian said he would advise patients that even if they have a
device that's not specifically rated for MRI safety, "Many centers
across the U.S. are capable of performing safe imaging despite your
device."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2pGopkv The New England Journal of Medicine,
online December 27, 2017.
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