The team will be developing a long-known alternative for producing Tc-99m that uses particle accelerators called cyclotrons that already exist in major hospitals throughout the country. By enabling regional hospitals to produce and distribute this lifesaving isotope to local clinics, widespread disruptions will be an issue of the past. Ruth added, “We believe this technology, based on existing cyclotrons, will enhance the reliability of medical-isotope supply for Canadians and, when we are successful, can be commercialized for sale in other countries.”
The team, known as CycloMed99 because of the cyclotron production of medical isotope Tc-99m using cyclotrons, brings together physicists, nuclear chemists, radiochemists, pharmacologists, biologists, technicians, and clinicians from across the country to answer the critical questions that remain to use this process at a large scale.
The proposal was entitled “A Collaborative Program for the Production of Tc-99m Using Medical Cyclotrons” and was submitted last July to the Non-reactor-based Isotope Supply Contribution Program formulated by Natural Resources Canada as part of the Government’s intention to lay the groundwork for a more secure and sustainable supply of medical isotopes in the future. Other teams successful in the program are being led by Advanced Cyclotron Systems, Inc., the Canadian Light Source, and the Prairie Isotope Production Enterprise.
For more information, please see URL http://www.triumf.ca/cyclomed99.
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The Competing Teams
- Advanced Cyclotron Systems, Inc. (cyclotron-based)
- Canadian Light Source (linear-accelerator based)
- Prairie Isotope Production Enterprise (linear-accelerator based)
-- Posted by Tim Meyer
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