Dr. Sara Lojo is passionate about interventional radiology and has been involved in the editorial board of many publications since her training. She considers editorialism to be a fundamental tool for training, encouraging its development and bringing it closer to the new generations of IR professionals.
In this Quarterly Update, she will highlight key issues in IR and accompanying CVIR Endovascular articles on the topic.
Dr. Sara Lojo is passionate about interventional radiology and has been involved in the editorial board of many publications since her training. She considers editorialism to be a fundamental tool for training, encouraging its development and bringing it closer to the new generations of IR professionals.
In this Quarterly Update, she will highlight key issues in IR and accompanying CVIR Endovascular articles on the topic.
Published on September 2025
Interventional Radiology (IR) is undergoing a profound transformation - no longer defined solely by technical expertise, but increasingly by its clinical leadership, integration into emergency care, and commitment to patient safety and education. A growing body of literature from CVIR Endovascular reflects this shift and invites a broader conversation about what it truly means to be a full clinical specialty in the 21st century.
Pioneering articles like The Rocky Road to Recognizing IR as a Full Clinical Specialty and A Contemporary European Analysis of IR Practice underscore the structural and political challenges that IR faces across Europe. Simultaneously, the development of 24/7 IR services and models like Damage Control Interventional Radiology demonstrate how IR is becoming indispensable in trauma and acute care, filling the critical gap between non-operative management and surgery.
Yet clinical recognition is not enough. A parallel movement is addressing the cultural and organizational maturity of the specialty. From rethinking adverse outcomes - not as failures, but as inevitable clinical consequences - to institutionalizing governance strategies, structured debriefings, and learning from errors, IR is embracing the principles of continuous improvement. Articles focused on complication management, electronic documentation, and safety culture reflect this necessary evolution.
Education is another cornerstone. Integrating IR into undergraduate medical curricula through simulation-based learning, as well as promoting reflective practice through debriefing, prepares future interventionalists to be not just technicians, but thoughtful clinicians and leaders.
Taken together, these contributions point toward a unified vision of IR: clinically embedded, quality-driven, ethically grounded, and educationally forward. As the specialty navigates its rocky road, these milestones mark a path toward a safer, more sustainable, and more recognized role within modern medicine.
The rocky road to recognizing interventional radiology as a full clinical speciality
Mohamad Hamady & Ian McCafferty
Velio Ascenti, Anna Maria Ierardi, Maryam Alfa-Wali, Carolina Lanza & Elika Kashef
Warren Clements & Jim Koukounaras
Clinical and endovascular practice in interventional radiology: a contemporary European analysis
Hong Kuan Kok, Thomas Rodt, Fabrizio Fanelli, Mohamad Hamady, Stefan Müller-Hülsbeck, Miquel Casares Santiago, Florian Wolf & Michael J. Lee
Anna Maria Ierardi, Velio Ascenti, Carolina Lanza, Serena Carriero, Gaetano Amato, Giuseppe Pellegrino, Francesco Giurazza, Pierluca Torcia & Gianpaolo Carrafiello
Iakovos Theodoulou, Rhys Judd, U. Raja, N. Karunanithy, Tarun Sabharwal, Afshin Gangi & Athanasios Diamantopoulos
Trends and implications of 24/7 interventional radiology in a newly opened acute hospital
Raymond Chung, Ashish Chawla, Sumer Shikhare & Suresh Babu
Iakovos Theodoulou, Christina Louca, Michail Sideris, Marios Nicolaides, Deepsha Agrawal, Antonios Halapas, Athanasios Diamantopoulos & Apostolos Papalois
Enhancing your practice: debriefing in interventional radiology
Kara Fitzgerald, Jesse Knight & Karim Valji
Quarterly Update 7: Lymphatics
Quarterly Update 6: Venous Thrombosis
Quarterly Update 5: Sustainability in IR
Quarterly Update 4: Complications in IR
Quarterly Update 3: Paediatric interventions
Have any topics you want to see covered? Want to give us feedback on the topics covered here? Get in touch!