Jan. 2, 2013 — NCBJ scientists have developed innovative technological solutions to produce [SUP]90[/SUP]Y and [SUP]177[/SUP]Lu radionuclides. The Polish invention, awarded by the international community with a silver medal during the Innova 2012 Fair in Brussels, is soon going to be implemented on an industrial scale, giving more hope to ever increasing number of oncological patients all over the world.
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Innovative solutions in production technology of the [SUP]90[/SUP]Y (yttrium) and [SUP]177[/SUP]Lu (lutetium) radioisotopes will help to obtain new medicines for cancer treatment. These solutions have been worked out in NCBJ Radioisotope Centre POLATOM within the framework of a three-year long project partly financed from the Innovative Economy Programme of the European Regional Development Fund. The 7.8 million PLN worth project is soon to be finished.
Innovation has been awarded with a silver medal during the Innova 2012 61st International Innovation, Research and New Technology Fair recently held in Brussels. Polish researchers have shown that both radio isotopes (so-far produced only at a small scale) in combination with such biologically active substances as peptides and monoclonal antibodies may form extremely effective medicines to cure some cancers. New radioisotopes will be a base to produce innovative radiopharmaceuticals capable to effectively and safely treat cancer cases in face of which medicine was so far helpless. New technological line dedicated for production of these radioisotopes has been developed in POLATOM labs in
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Innovative solutions in production technology of the [SUP]90[/SUP]Y (yttrium) and [SUP]177[/SUP]Lu (lutetium) radioisotopes will help to obtain new medicines for cancer treatment. These solutions have been worked out in NCBJ Radioisotope Centre POLATOM within the framework of a three-year long project partly financed from the Innovative Economy Programme of the European Regional Development Fund. The 7.8 million PLN worth project is soon to be finished.
Innovation has been awarded with a silver medal during the Innova 2012 61st International Innovation, Research and New Technology Fair recently held in Brussels. Polish researchers have shown that both radio isotopes (so-far produced only at a small scale) in combination with such biologically active substances as peptides and monoclonal antibodies may form extremely effective medicines to cure some cancers. New radioisotopes will be a base to produce innovative radiopharmaceuticals capable to effectively and safely treat cancer cases in face of which medicine was so far helpless. New technological line dedicated for production of these radioisotopes has been developed in POLATOM labs in