About RITN℠
The Radiation Injury Treatment NetworkSM (RITN) is a national network of medical centers with expertise in the management of bone marrow failure and works with partners from other medical specialties to assist with managing acute radiation syndrome and its health-related consequences.
Since its formal inception in 2006, RITN has developed treatment guidelines and standard operating procedures for centers involved in the response to large-scale radiologic incidents, solidified partnerships with governmental and non-governmental organizations and conducted annual exercises.
RITN is a cooperative effort of the National Marrow Donor Program® (NMDP) and the American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy (ASTCT).
RITN aims to:
- Accept casualties from a distant incident
- Accept patient transfers to their instituitions
- Provide supportive care for casualties with marrow toxic injuries
- Provide treatment expertise to practitioners caring for casualties at other locations
- Collect data on casualties treated at their treatment facilities
- Facilitate bone marrow transplantation for the small percentage of casualties who require hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
It's important to note that RITN hospitals are not first responders nor are they decontamination facilities.
Network Capabilities
- Marrow transplantation
- Marrow toxic injury triage, evaluation and treatment
- Marrow typing of related and volunteer donors
- Medical outcomes data collection: Marrow Toxic Injury Consent Forms & Research Sample Repository
- Immediate access to cryopreserved cellular products
RITN: What You Need To Know
Duration: 5 minutes
Overview of the Radiation Injury Treatment Network
RITN Concept of Operations
RITN Resources
- RITN YouTube Channel
- RITN Informational Flyer (PDF)
- Join RITN Flyer (PDF)
- Are you prepared to care for victims of a radiological disaster? (PDF)
- RITN - Serving an essential role in the United States' radiological emergency response plan (PDF)
- RITN Memorandum of Understanding with the Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response (PDF)