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The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center Proton Therapy Facility

 

作者: Alfred Smith,   Wayne Newhauser,   Mitchell Latinkic,   Amy Hay,   Bruce McMaken,   John Styles,   James Cox,  

 

期刊: AIP Conference Proceedings  (AIP Available online 1903)
卷期: Volume 680, issue 1  

页码: 1073-1076

 

ISSN:0094-243X

 

年代: 1903

 

DOI:10.1063/1.1619893

 

出版商: AIP

 

数据来源: AIP

 

摘要:

The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center (MDACC), in partnership with Sanders Morris Harris Inc., a Texas‐based investment banking firm, and The Styles Company, a developer and manager of hospitals and healthcare facilities, is building a proton therapy facility near the MDACC main complex at the Texas Medical Center in Houston, Texas USA. The MDACC Proton Therapy Center will be a freestanding, investor‐owned radiation oncology center offering state‐of‐the‐art proton beam therapy. The facility will have four treatment rooms: three rooms will have rotating, isocentric gantries and the fourth treatment room will have capabilities for both large and small field (e.g. ocular melanoma) treatments using horizontal beam lines. There will be an additional horizontal beam room dedicated to physics research and development, radiation biology research, and outside users who wish to conduct experiments using proton beams. The first two gantries will each be initially equipped with a passive scattering nozzle while the third gantry will have a magnetically swept pencil beam scanning nozzle. The latter will include enhancements to the treatment control system that will allow for the delivery of proton intensity modulation treatments. The proton accelerator will be a 250 MeV zero‐gradient synchrotron with a slow extraction system. The facility is expected to open for patient treatments in the autumn of 2005. It is anticipated that 675 patients will be treated during the first full year of operation, while full capacity, reached in the fifth year of operation, will be approximately 3,400 patients per year. Treatments will be given up to 2‐shifts per day and 6 days per week. © 2003 American Institute of Physics

 

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