Context:
The privately run Apollo Hospital said on Tuesday that it has treated up to 900 patients in its Chennai Based Proton Cancer Centre, and 47% of those cases are brain tumours.
About Proton Beam Therapy:
- Proton therapy is a type of radiation therapy which uses protons rather than x-rays to treat cancer.
- A proton is a positively charged particle. At high energy, protons can destroy cancer cells.
- Doctors may use proton therapy alone. They may also combine it with x-ray radiation therapy, surgery, chemotherapy, and/or immunotherapy.
- Like x-ray radiation, proton therapy is a type of external-beam radiation therapy. It painlessly delivers radiation through the skin from a machine outside the body.
- While radiation can prove toxic to the whole body, protons can destroy cancer cells precisely by targeting tumours, thus saving adjoining organs.
- Applications:
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- The PBT is considered a viable alternative to radiation for treating solid tumours, especially head and neck cancers.
- Patients with cancers of the prostate, ovaries, breast, lungs, bones and soft tissues have also seen promising results in terms of recovery through the therapy.
Challenges in setting PBT centre
- Setting up a PBT centre is fraught with infrastructural and regulatory challenges stemming from safety concerns from the Department of Atomic Energy.
- A PBT machine is a huge contraption, up to three storeys tall and costs nearly ₹500 crore.
- There are concerns of safety, as hydrogen is a highly volatile element and daily checks to prevent leaks have to be run.
News Source: The Hindu
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