Future Of Radiotherapy In The UK
Main Category: Radiology / Nuclear MedicineAlso Included In: Cancer / Oncology
Article Date: 08 Dec 2007 - 0:00 PDT
The University of Surrey welcomes the Government's announcement (3 December) that improved radiotherapy strategies are going to be at the forefront of government policy in the fight against cancer. This announcement is extremely timely, but it is extremely sad that the UK currently has no plans for the newest type of radiotherapy which uses charged particles rather than X-rays. This exciting new generation of radiotherapy, which delivers more damage to the tumour and much less to the surrounding healthy tissue, will especially benefit children and tumours that are more difficult to treat with conventional (photon) radiotherapy. A report on particle therapy was submitted to HMG by the National Radiotherapy Advisory Group (NRAG) last year.
There are now over 60 particle therapy facilities in various stages of operation, development and procurement in the USA and the rest of Europe, but none are currently planned for the UK. The UK does have a low energy facility at Clatterbridge which has been spectacularly successful in treating tumours of the surface of the eye but is too low energy to treat more common deeper-seated tumours.
The UK is in an excellent position to take advantage of particle therapy as there are excellent networks both on the clinical side (ACORRN) and between clinicians scientists and engineers (EPSRC Research Network on Biomedical Applications of High Energy Ion Beams). Moreover , the research infrastructure to take this research from bench to bedside is already in place, via the Wolfson Nanobeam Project at the University of Surrey and recent funding through the Research Councils Basic Technology programme (CONFORM and LIBRA) for the next generation of particle therapy machines , which aim to develop the next generation of ion sources for particle therapy.
In 2009 the UK will celebrate Rutherford's experiments which helped to understand the atom and the role of the proton yet the UK is the only nation in Western Europe without plans to use this discovery, and protons for a charged particle facility.
SURREY UNIVERSITY
Guildford
Surrey
GU2 7XH
http://www.surrey.ac.uk
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MLA
14 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/91125.php>
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Reaction To New In UK -radiology
posted by sylvia bilboe on 11 Dec 2007 at 1:06 amIt is sad that the UK has no plans for this new technology - particle radiation, and is not in the media arena, so that this article has no voice. Maybe someone will raise the profile - I hope so
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