Expanding the Horizons Of Proton Beam Therapy

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on email
Share on print

The Cancer Letter recently published information regarding proton therapy facilities in the U.S., highlighting a contention that 85 percent of patients treated with protons have prostate cancer, the logical implication of which would be that this important resource is utilized minimally for other cancers. In this response, we wish to correct this erroneous impression and also wish to highlight the direction that this technology is moving in.

To access this subscriber-only content please log in or subscribe.

If your institution has a site license, log in with IP-login or register for a sponsored account.*
*Not all site licenses are enrolled in sponsored accounts.

Login Subscribe
Minesh P. Mehta
Professor of radiation oncology, University of Maryland School of Medicine; Medical director, Maryland Proton Treatment Center
Katja Langen
Associate professor of radiation oncology, University of Maryland School of Medicine;
Associate chief of proton physics, Maryland Proton Treatment Center
William F. Regine
Isadore and Fannie Schneider Foxman Chair and Professor of Radiation Oncology, University of Maryland School of Medicine; Executive director, Maryland Proton Treatment Center

YOU MAY BE INTERESTED IN

By the end of 2022, Toni Monteiro had no fight left in her. She had been battling a rare blood cancer for three years. Her husband had just died. She was at risk of being evicted from her Washington, DC, apartment. Also, her heart was failing. “You’re really under stress,” Monteiro recalls her physician saying. ...

VOICES of Black Women, the largest population study of Black women in the United States, will be the first of American Cancer Society’s large-scale population studies to be initiated using an AI-driven data management platform—promising to bring observational cancer research out of the age of Excel data files and email sharing.
Minesh P. Mehta
Professor of radiation oncology, University of Maryland School of Medicine; Medical director, Maryland Proton Treatment Center
Katja Langen
Associate professor of radiation oncology, University of Maryland School of Medicine;
Associate chief of proton physics, Maryland Proton Treatment Center
William F. Regine
Isadore and Fannie Schneider Foxman Chair and Professor of Radiation Oncology, University of Maryland School of Medicine; Executive director, Maryland Proton Treatment Center

Login