Showing posts with label isotope. Show all posts
Showing posts with label isotope. Show all posts

Monday, December 24, 2007

At least a month backlog of radioisotopes Western Health Region

It will take at least a month to clear up a backlog of specialized medical tests for western Newfoundland patients, officials said as a nuclear medicine department reopens.

The Western Health regional authority cancelled tests for 48 patients through Western Brook Memorial Hospital in Corner Brook after the Chalk River reactor shut down in November.

The supply of medical isotopes has been restored and officials were expecting to resume tests, including bone and heart scans, on Monday.

"It's wonderful," said Mike Brake, a nuclear medicine technologist who has worked at the Corner Brook hospital for three decades.

"This is the first incident in which we've had an interruption in service, so it's quite unusual for us, but we're so very happy to be back to normal."

Peter Dawe, executive director of the Canadian Cancer Society's Newfoundland and Labrador branch, said the reopening of the department will reduce anxiety for patients waiting for tests.

"It's very important news for people on the west coast, obviously, because you can't treat them and you're absolutely stuck until you get a proper diagnosis," Dawe said.

Western Health has already begun contacting patients to rebook cancelled appointments.

Source: CBC

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St. Joseph's Health Care to receive scarce medical isotope today

AECL blunder choked supply of key isotope

Ontario reactor shutdown forces cancellation of cancer tests worldwide

Monday, December 10, 2007

St. Joseph's Health Care to receive scarce medical isotope today

St. Joseph's Health Care has been promised a precious shipment of a scarce medical isotope to be received today.

The nuclear material will be used for breast cancer surgeries and bone scans for cancer.

"It's going to allow us to handle our most urgent patients," hospital spokesperson Betty Dann said last Thursday.

St. Joseph's, London Health Sciences Centre and hospitals across the region have been caught in the worldwide shortage of the medical isotope supplied from a reactor in Chalk River, ON.

The radioactive isotope is injected into a patient's vein and can be captured by a sophisticated camera.

(Read more here and here)

Hundreds of patients in the London area have had their cancer and cardiac tests rescheduled last week because the aging Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. reactor has been shut down longer than expected for maintenance.

"The partial isotope shipment expected on Monday, will allow St. Joseph's to scan eight patients," Dann said.

"If St. Joseph's patients haven't been notified their appointment has been changed, they should keep it," Dann said.

St. Thomas Elgin General Hospital usually does 10 to 15 tests a day with the isotope, plus emergency cases.

Last week, the hospital has been receiving enough for only two scans a day.

"We are able to do a dose for a patient that needs a lung scan and a dose for a patient that needs a cardiac scan each day," said Anita Grant, the hospital's director of patient care.

Meanwhile, the federal government is demanding the maker of the crucial isotopes sort out technical problems that have crippled production....................................

London Free Press

".......................................................To be continued"

Related articles:

AECL blunder choked supply of key isotope

Ontario reactor shutdown forces cancellation of cancer tests worldwide

Friday, December 7, 2007

AECL blunder choked supply of key isotope

Or: Ontario reactor shutdown forces cancellation of cancer tests worldwide, Part 2 (click here for Part 1)

Management mistakes caused the current breakdown in Canada's supply of critical medical isotopes, says the boss of the Chalk River nuclear reactor that makes the isotopes.

Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. senior vice-president Brian McGee told the country's nuclear safety watchdog here yesterday that the radioisotope-producing National Research Universal (NRU) reactor will likely be shut down until late this month or early January to bring it up to current safety standards.

Similar management and engineering blunders also mean a new facility intended to replace that 50-year-old reactor is six years behind schedule, official documents show, with no isotope production expected until the end of next year.

The lengthy NRU shutdown and lack of backup production mean a fresh supply of radioactive materials essential to diagnosing and treating cancers won't flow to hospitals across North America until the second week of January, McGee said during a tempestuous appearance before the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission.

Commission president Linda Keen criticized AECL for suggesting that the particular safety upgrades were merely optional and not a strict condition of the reactor's operating license.

"This is absolutely revisionist," said the visibly upset Keen. "This should have been done, and it was the clear expectation of the commission that it would be done. You are, and were, in violation of your licenses given to you by Canadians."

"The safety upgrading was supposed to have been completed by the end of 2005 but AECL officials didn't realize this was a strict condition of the reactor's operating license," McGee said.

Instead, they thought the upgrading could be phased in throughout 2008 during the four-day shutdowns scheduled monthly for routine maintenance.

Despite repeated questioning by members of the safety commission, McGee did not explain how AECL managed to so badly misinterpret its license obligations. Senior commission staff told the hearing the conditions were spelled out in documents stretching back 10 years.

The upgrade would connect two pumps to an emergency power supply designed to work even if the Chalk River reactor is hit by a major earthquake. The pumps circulate the heavy water that prevents the reactor from overheating. Although the NRU also boasts other safety systems, the earthquake-resistant cooling system is considered a key part of the defence against a possible core meltdown.

The current NRU shutdown began Nov. 18 for four days of routine maintenance. By Nov. 20, however, AECL and commission staff realized that the emergency power supply was supposed to have been put in two years ago, but hadn't been.

"I can't tell you why we didn't recognize the upgrades were required," McGee said.

The upgrading controversy is the latest in a series of missteps that have plagued attempts to protect Chalk River's position as the world's leading producer of life-saving medical isotopes.

An estimated 45 per cent of current world production of molybdenum-99 comes from the NRU. Moly-99 has a half life of only 66 hours and must be shipped daily to hospitals, where it is used to generate the radioisotope technetium-99, employed in four out of five nuclear medicine procedures.

But a new isotope facility intended to replace the aging reactor has suffered a series of design errors, engineering foul-ups and slipshod testing, all extensively documented at the nuclear safety commission.

At one point, AECL concealed safety problems from the watchdog for almost three months.

It was originally budgeted at $160 million and scheduled to begin operations in 2002. No current cost figures have been made public.

TheStar

Why am I not surprised...............................?

Related article:

Ontario reactor shutdown forces cancellation of cancer tests worldwide