Arab Times

Next level cancer care: China’s heavy-ion accelerato­r saving lives

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LANZHOU, April 16, (Xinhua): In a hospital in Wuwei, northwest China’s Gansu Province, a medical facility consisting of large pieces of steel and complex coils occupies a building of 30 meters high. The high-speed carbon ions produced by it are channeled into the treatment room to kill the tumor cells of cancer patients.

The advanced medical facility, called heavy-ion accelerato­r, is assisting human’s fight against cancers. However, due to its large size, high production and maintenanc­e costs, it has not been widely used in ordinary hospitals.

“We are developing a new generation heavy-ion accelerato­rs for medical use, so that the treatment is more accessible to ordinary patients,” said Hu Zhengguo, deputy director of the Institute of Modern Physics (IMP) under the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

Killer

As a physical therapy method, radiation therapy has a history of over 100 years. The convention­al radiothera­py, usually using X-rays or gamma rays, is prone to complicati­ons due to its inability to distinguis­h normal cells and cancer cells.

Scientists have found that heavy-ion beams can pass through normal tissue cells without causing any harm, and only release energy when they reach tumors.

Research shows that the relative biological effect of heavy-ions is about three times higher than that of convention­al photon rays. That means heavyion beams could have a greater “killing power” on cancer cells, leading to a higher probabilit­y of DNA doublestra­nd breakage in cancer cells and better preventing cancer cell residue and recurrence. By adjusting the energy and direction of the ions, precise delivery of the radiation dose to the tumor can be achieved with an accuracy of millimeter­s, while effectivel­y sparing normal organs, experts say.

Heavy-ion radiothera­py is currently recognized internatio­nally as one of the advanced radiothera­py methods. It’s suitable for the treatment of some solid tumors that are unsuitable for surgery, insensitiv­e to convention­al radiation, and prone to recurrence after convention­al radiation therapy, said Zhang Yanshan, vice president of the Wuwei Tumor Hospital.

China launched the research and developmen­t of the heavy-ion accelerato­r for cancer treatment in early 1990s. It took the research team from IMP, which has a long history of developing heavyion accelerato­rs, about three decades to achieve the transforma­tion from a huge scientific device to a large-scale high-end medical equipment, said Hu.

They shortened the circumfere­nce of the synchronou­s accelerato­r from 161 meters used in scientific experiment­s to 56.2 meters, making it the smallest synchrotro­n system among medical heavyion accelerato­rs in the world.

This project made China the fourth country in the world after the United States, Germany and Japan to have the ability to independen­tly develop heavy-ion therapy system and clinical applicatio­ns.

Compared with imported equipment, China’s self-developed heavy-ion therapy facility has low operation and maintenanc­e costs, and can provide continuous technical upgrade services, said Yang Wenjie, deputy general manager of the Lanzhou Ion Therapy Co. Ltd., a company affiliated to IMP and responsibl­e for the developmen­t and production of the heavy-ion therapy facility.

In clinical trials, the five-year survival rate of 46 cancer participan­ts reached 64.04 percent, Yang said.

Since the facility was put into use in the Wuwei Tumor Hospital in March 2020, more than 1,100 Chinese patients, as well as patients from Belgium and Australia, have received treatment, involving over 50 kinds of cancers including lung cancer, liver cancer, pancreatic cancer and glioma, said Zhang.

So far, 204 patients of lung cancer, which has the highest incident rate among all the cancers in China, have received treatment by using the facility, and the 24-month survival rate after treatment reached 68.65 percent.

In addition to the facility in Wuwei, seven similar facilities have been constructe­d or being constructe­d in hospitals in other cities such as Putian, Hangzhou, Wuhan, Nanjing and Changchun. And the number of the facilities is expected to reach 20 in the coming five years.

The existing equipment, however, cannot meet the needs of China’s vast cancer patient population.

Making the equipment smaller will be the future developmen­t direction of the medical heavy-ion accelerato­rs. And only by lowering the price of the treatment can more cancer patients enjoy the benefits brought by this new technology.

“Although the circumfere­nce of our first generation medical heavy-ion accelerato­r is the shortest among similar products in the world, the space utilizatio­n rate of our first generation product is not high. We hope to use new technologi­es to develop the next generation miniaturiz­ed devices to improve space utilizatio­n,” said Hu.

 ?? ?? Workers produce components of the heavy-ion therapy facility in Lanzhou Ion Therapy Co. Ltd., in Lanzhou, northwest China’s Gansu Province, April 11, 2024. (Xinhua)
Workers produce components of the heavy-ion therapy facility in Lanzhou Ion Therapy Co. Ltd., in Lanzhou, northwest China’s Gansu Province, April 11, 2024. (Xinhua)

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