Posted on 01/06/2025 1:33:36 PM PST by nickcarraway
How is this different than the proton therapy that has been in the US for several years? Mainly for prostate cancer?
Right now, only two private centres in Spain offer proton therapy. But from 2026 onwards, that’s all set to change. A whopping 10 new facilities will open across the country, thanks in large part to a €280 million donation from the Fundación Amancio Ortega
Loma Linda University in California has been wooing this for twenty years, I had some treatment for Schwannoma but had to have radiation ten years later.
“stopping the radiation from spilling over into surrounding healthy tissue.”
That would be the holy grail of radiotherapy.
I know, from hard family experience, that radiation can do wonders at killing cancer... but the collateral damage can be lethal to the patient.
“..Unlike traditional radiotherapy (which uses photons)..”
definitely not photons...
This seems to be the difference.
X-Ray is photons
“definitely not photons...”
High energy photons are used in cancer radiation treatment.
And gamma too.
There are many proton therapy centers in the US that fire protons directly into tumors. I think they are the same.
Does it work for cancers that have metastasize?
Does it work for blood cancers?
Gamma is the region (highest energy photons) in the frequency band.
RE: There are many proton therapy centers in the US that fire protons directly into tumors. I think they are the same.
If we already have them here in the USA, what makes Spain’s so special?
And don’t other advanced countries like Germany, Switzerland or those in Scandinavia have them?
That was my thought as well. The reporter really didn’t distinguish the differences.
I was in the fraternity during my undergrad days. ; -)
Yep. We already have proton therapy here in the U.S. Maybe Spain didn’t have it until now.
PSU-Hershey, John’s Hopkins, UPenn Med and many other have had *proton therapy* for years. Is there a difference?
“...has just arrived in Spain...”
So, did the aliens 👽 drop it off, or what?
It’s not just mainly prostate cancer. It’s useful for many types of cancer.
There are many cases of prostate cancer where proton therapy is not appropriate. Metastatic prostate cancer is one of them if it has spread to bones like mine was.
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