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Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences (1995)

Chapter: 3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES

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Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
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3
Reactor-Produced Radionuclides

HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE

More than 50 years after the discovery of nuclear fission by Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann in 1938 and more than 50 years after the demonstration of a self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction by Fermi and coworkers in 1942, the use of reactor products permeates nearly every field of science. The book by Kamen (1957) documents this progress. A more complete treatment is provided by Stannard (1988). Historically, isotopes were provided to researchers by the Atomic Energy Commission and the Energy Research and Development Agency and are now provided by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) played a pioneering role in the development of the first full-scale operating reactor prototype and the initial production of radioisotopes for applications in medical and biological research (Mirzadeh et al., 1992). Although the tracer principle was established by de Hevesy in the early 1900s (de Hevesy, 1913), the widespread uses of radioactivity began with the production of radionuclides at the reactor at ORNL. Sodium-24 was one of the first radionuclides used to measure the permeability of canine red blood cells in vivo. Although carbon-11-labeled compounds were created shortly after the development of the cyclotron by bombarding boron-10 with deuterons, the boron-10(d,n) reaction, the production of longer-lived carbon-14 by the nitrogen-14(n,p) reaction in the nuclear reactor at ORNL was instrumental in establishing its widespread use throughout the field of biology. The tracer approach was also quickly applied to clinical situations. Among the important ''firsts" were the determination of the speed of peripheral circulation using radium by Blumgart and Yens (1927) and the study of thyroid metabolism using radioactive iodine by Hamilton nd Soley (1939). Uptake, retention, and excretion of radiolabeled phosphorus (phospho-

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×

rus-32) and radiolabeled iodine (iodine-131) provided valuable information about the selectivity of proposed therapeutic regimens. Radioisotopes of iron and chromium were also valuable in applications in hematology. Red blood cell survival, iron physiology, and blood volume were some of the important contributions. In the early 1940s, phosphorus-32 and then sulfur-35 and iodine-131, were used to label antigens and antibodies. In the process of studying the behavior of iodine-131-labeled insulin, Berson and Yalow (1959) developed the sensitive assay system for blood components known as radioimmunoassay, the importance of which was recognized with a Nobel Prize in 1977.

This body of work laid the groundwork for modern biomedical and clinical research, in particular with reference to the tracer principle, which became an invaluable tool (Bizzell, 1966; Mirzadeh et al., 1992). The use of radioisotopes is unique in that it provides a method for measuring biochemical processes in vivo, especially in cases in which the process is easily saturated, since radiation makes it possible to detect and localize quantities as small as only a few thousand radiolabeled molecules. The development of generator technology in the 1960s marked another advance in nuclear medicine research and in clinical nuclear medicine. The Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) used fission-product molybdenum-99 to produce the first molybdenum-99/technetium-99m (99Mo/99mTc) generator, revolutionizing the field of nuclear medicine (Tucker et al., 1958). 99mTc, the isotope used in more than 80 percent of the diagnostic nuclear imaging studies performed today, is the short-lived "daughter" resulting from the decay of 99Mo. Simple devices now enable hospitals to extract 99mTc from the 99Mo/99mTc generators as needed, and instant kits provide prepackaged chemicals to simplify its incorporation into organic molecules.

Other reactor-produced radioisotopes continue to play a major role in research, and recent advances in many fields (such as molecular biology, including the Human Genome Project) could not have been accomplished without the use of 32P. In addition, many of the isotopes useful for therapeutic applications, such as strontium-89 for the palliation of metastatic bone pain, are produced in reactors. Two other reactor-produced radioisotopes, samarium-153 and rhenium-186, may also be of use in the treatment of bone cancer and are currently under clinical study. There is therefore a need to maintain a continuous supply of these isotopes both for the benefit of patients and to provide investigators with the tools needed to develop and improve such technologies.

CURRENT APPLICATIONS IN MEDICINE AND PHYSICAL AND LIFE SCIENCES

The peaceful use of radioisotopes has made great progress since 1911, when George de Hevesy demonstrated that various substances could be radiolabeled and subsequently "traced" by spiking his meals with some naturally occurring radioactivity to prove that his landlady was using leftovers instead of fresh food

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×

(Carmain, 1993). In addition to their use in the clinical practice of nuclear medicine and radiology and in the research conducted in those medical fields, radioisotopes have found applications in a wide variety of scientific fields such as nutrition, genetics, molecular biology, pharmacology, drug development, nuclear physics, environmental chemistry, geology, and industrial manufacturing.

Table 3-1 shows the extraordinarily widespread uses and applications of reactor-produced radioisotopes in the biomedical field.

The most important clinical radionuclide currently is 99mTc. Disintegration of this short-lived radionuclide product, which is itself the product of the decay of 99mMo, results in the emission of photons with sufficient energy to be passed through considerable amounts of tissue and to be detected by a sensitive camera. To the extent that the 99mTc can be confined to a specific organ or tissue (a tumor, for example), these photons produce an image of that organ or tissue. Much radiopharmaceutical research focuses on ways of concentrating 99mTc (and other radionuclides) in biological targets of interests, generally by tying it to a substance or molecule that is differentially taken up by that tissue. The 6-hour half-life of 99mTc minimizes the amount of radiation to which the patient is exposed, but puts a premium on scheduling and rapid action once the radiopharmaceutical is produced. The 99mMo/99mTc generator discussed above has vastly simplified this process by allowing hospitals to prepare their own radiopharmaceuticals on-site and when needed. Developed at Brookhaven National Laboratory in the early 1950s as part of the program to separate fission products, the 99/99mTc generator has now become the major source of radionuclides for nuclear medicine (Table 3-2). Other reactor-produced diagnostic radionuclides in common use are iodine-125, iodine-131, and xenon-133.

A potentially very large growth area involves therapeutic radionuclides. Perhaps as many as one-half to three-quarters of all cancer patients receive radiation at some point in their treatment. Cobalt-60 has been a very common source of gamma rays for external-beam treatment, with cesium-137 occasionally substituted for head and neck irradiation. Brachytherapy is often used for very well localized cancers. This originally involved implanting encapsulated "seeds" of radium or radon in or near the tumor, but now iodine-125, iridium-192, or gold-198 used more frequently. A third method has been the object of increasing research; it employs isotopes that naturally accumulate in a specific tissue or that can be attached to a molecule with such specificity. Iodine-131, one of the first isotopes produced with nuclear reactors, has been used for several decades to diagnose and treat thyroid diseases because of its affinity for thyroid tissue. Efforts to expand the therapeutic approach beyond the thyroid have primarily focused on reactor-produced isotopes, although an appreciable number are also produced in accelerators. The major categories of promising therapeutic applications are as follows:

  1. Bone agents to reduce bone pain (strontium-89, rhenium-186, rhenium-188, samarium-153, and tin-117).

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×

TABLE 3-1 Selected Reactor-Produced Radionuclides with Biomedical Applications

Radionuclides  

Uses

Arsenic-77  

• In cancer therapy

Bromine-82  

• In metabolic studies and studies of estrogen receptor content

Calcium-47  

• In studies of cell function and bone formation of mammals and to produce Scandium-47

Californium-252  

• In brachytherapy for treatment of cervical cancer and potentially for treatment of gliomas

Carbon-14  

• For medical research to trace metabolism of new drugs and other organic carbon-containing molecules

Cerium-141  

• For research and development on lung densities

Cesium-137  

• To treat cancer; to measure correct patient dosages of radiopharmaceuticals

Chromium-51  

• To assess red blood cell survival studies

Cobalt-58  

• To diagnose pernicious anemia

Cobalt-60  

• To treat cancer and sterilize surgical instruments

Copper-64  

• As a clinical diagnostic agent for cancer and metabolic disorders

Copper-67  

• In cancer therapy and to label antibodies for cancer therapy

Dysprosium-165  

• To treat rheumatoid arthritis

Dysprosium-166  

• Decays to holmium-166 which is used in cancer therapy

Einsteinium-253  

• To radiolabel antibodies for cancer therapy

Erbium-169  

• To treat rheumatoid arthritis

Fermium-255  

• To radiolabel antibodies for cancer therapy

Gadolinium-159  

• In cancer therapy

Gold-199  

• In cancer therapy and to treat rheumatoid arthritis

Holmium-166  

• In cancer therapy and to treat rheumatoid arthritis

Iodine-125  

• As a potential cancer therapeutic agent and for basic biomedical research

Iodine-129  

• To check radioactivity counters in in vitro diagnostic testing

Iodine-131  

• To diagnose and treat thyroid disorders including cancer and for basic biomedical research

Iridium-191  

• To assess cardiac function especially in the pediatric population

Iridium-192  

• In cancer therapy

Lutetium-177m  

• In cancer therapy and to label antibodies for cancer therapy

Molybdenum-99  

• To produce technetium-99m, the most commonly used radioisotope in clinical nuclear medicine

Osmium-191  

• Decays to iridium-191m, which is used for cardiac studies

Osmium-194  

• Decays to iridium-194, which is used in cancer therapy

Palladium-103  

• In the treatment of prostate cancer

Phosphorus-32  

• In cancer treatment, cell metabolism and kinetics, molecular biology, genetics research, biochemistry, microbiology, enzymology, and as a starter to make many basic chemicals and research products

Phosphorus-33  

• In cancer treatment, molecular biology and genetic research, and biochemical and enzymological studies

Platinum-195m  

• In pharmacokinetic studies of antitumor agents

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×

Radionuclides  

Uses

Rhenium-186  

• As a bone cancer therapeutic agent and to radiolabel various molecules as cancer therapeutic agents; also used to treat rheumatoid arthritis

Rhenium-188  

• For treatment of medullary thyroid carcinoma and alleviation of pain in bone metastases

Samarium-145  

• For treatment of ocular cancer

Samarium-153  

• To radiolabel various molecules as cancer therapeutic agents and to alleviate bone cancer pain

Scandium-47  

• In the therapy of cancer

Selenium-75  

• In protein studies in life science research

Silver-111  

• In cancer therapy

Strontium-85  

• To study bone formation and metabolism

Strontium-89  

• To alleviate metastatic bone pain

Strontium-90  

• Decays to yttrium-90, which is used in cancer therapy

Sulfur-35  

• In studies of cell metabolism and kinetics, molecular biology, genetics research, biochemistry, microbiology, enzymology, and as a starter to make many basic chemicals and research products

Technetium-99m  

• The most widely used radiopharmaceutical in nuclear medicine imaging

Tellurium-123m  

• For research and development on lung densities and calibrating; also used in cardiology

Tin-117m  

• For palliative treatment of bone cancer pain

Tritium (hydrogen-3)  

• To make tritiated water, which is used as a starter for thousands of different research products and basics chemicals, and for life science and drug metabolism studies to ensure the safety of potential new drugs

Tungsten-188  

• Decays to rhenium-188 for treatment of cancer and rheumatoid arthritis

Xenon-133  

• In nuclear medicine for lung ventilation and perfusion studies

Yttrium-90  

• To radiolabel various molecules as cancer therapeutic agents

 

SOURCES: Carmain, 1993; personal communication from T. Rosseel, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, February 11, 1994.

  1. Halogen-labeled estrogens for hormone-dependent cancers (bromine-82 and iodine-131).

  2. Halogen-labeled nucleosides for cancer treatment (iodine-125, iodine-131).

  3. Colloids for synovectomy (dysprosium-165, holmium-166, yttrium-90, and palladium-109).

  4. Monoclonal antibodies and tissue-specific peptides for cancer treatment (iodine-125, iodine-131, yttrium-90, copper-64).

An example of drug development from the first of these categories is that of strontium-89 chloride (recently approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra-

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×

TABLE 3-2 Technetium-Based Radiopharmaceuticals

Generic Name

Product Name

Use

Manufacturer

Technetium generator

Ultra-TechneKow FM

Supply of 99mTc

Mallinckrodt

Technetium generator

Supply of 99mTc

Medi-Physics

TechneLite

Supply of 99mTc

DuPont-Merck

Aggregated albumin

Macrotec

Lung imaging

Squibb

TechneScan MAA

Lung imaging

Mallinckrodt

Pulmolite

Lung imaging

DuPont-Merck

Aggregated albumin

Lung imaging

CIS-US

MPI MAA

Lung imaging

Merck Sharp & Dohme

Albumin colloid

Microlite

Imaging of RE system

Dupont-Merck

Serum albumin

HSA Kit

Blood pool imaging

Medi-Physics

Disofenin

Hepatolite

Hepatobiliary imaging

Dupont-Merck

Exametazime

Ceretec

Cerebral perfusion

Amersham

Lidofenin

TechneScan HIDA

Hepatobiliary imaging

Merck Sharp & Dohme

Mebrofenin

Choletec

Hepatobiliary imaging

Squibb

Medronate

Osteolite

Bone imaging

DuPont-Merck

AN-MDP

Bone imaging

CIS-US

TecheScan MDP

Bone imaging

Merck Sharp & Dohme

MDP-Squibb

Bone imaging

Squibb

Medronate

Bone imaging

Medi-Physics

TechneScan MDP

Bone imaging

CIS-US

Mertiatide

TechneScan MAG3

Renal imaging

Mallinckrodt

Oxidronate

OsteoSan HDP

Bone imaging

Mallinckrodt

Penetate sodium

DTPA

Kidney and brain imaging

Medi-Physics

AN-DTPA

Kidney and brain imaging

CIS-US

Techneplex

Kidney and brain imaging

CIS-US

Pyro- and tri- metaphosphates

TechneScan PYP

Bone imaging

Mallinckrodt

Phosphotec

Bone imaging

Squibb

Pyrolite

Bone imaging

DuPont-Merck

AN-Pyrotec

Bone imaging

CIS-US

Red blood cell kit

Ultratag RBC

Bloodpool imaging

Mallinckrodt

RB-SCAN

Blood pool imaging

Cadema

Sestamibi

Cardiolite

Myocardial imaging

DuPont-Merck

Gluceptate

Glucoscan

Kidney and brain imaging

DuPont-Merck

TechneScan Gluceptate

Kidney and brain imaging

Merck Sharp & Dohme

Succimer

DMSA

Renal studies

Medi-Physics

Sulfur colloid

Sulfur Colloid

Gastrointestinal and organ studies

Medi-Physics

Tesuloid

Gastrointestinal and organ studies

Squibb

AN-Sulfur Colloid

Gastrointestinal and organ studies

CIS-US

Teboroxime

CardioTec

Myocardial imaging

Squibb

 

SOURCE: R. Brown, Mallinckrodt, Inc., personal communication, April 6, 1994.

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×

tion) for the palliation of bone pain in patients with metastatic bone cancer. Strontium, rhenium, and tin are all preferentially taken up by bone, most readily at sites of active osteogenesis. Primary bone tumors and areas of metastatic involvement can thus accumulate significantly greater concentrations of radioactive strontium (or rhenium or tin) than surrounding normal bone. In addition, strontium-89 is retained in metastatic bone lesions much longer than it is in normal bone. At present, strontium-89 chloride is approved for use only as an adjunct to external-beam radiotherapy, but in such cases a single injection of strontium-89 has been shown to provide significant pain relief for 6 months (Lewington et al., 1991).

Radiohalogen-labeled estrogens are being tested for their ability to selectively deliver radiation to tumor sites in the breast and female reproductive organs (DeSombre et al., 1992; McLaughlin et al., 1989). Scientists at Mallinckrodt Medical Inc., have attached samarium-153 and holmium-166 to hydroxyapatite particles as potential synovectomy agents for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (University of Missouri Research Reactor Center, 1994). Radiohalogen-labeled pyrimidine nucleosides have the potential to deliver short-range (Auger) electrons to restricted sites in tumors (Adelstein,1993).

At a meeting on isotope availability at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, Zalutsky (1992) pointed out that the developments in biotechnology have enhanced the possibility of radioimmunotherapy, that is, raising monoclonal antibodies against specific cell surface antigens on a variety of human cell types, especially tumor cells, and using them to deliver radionuclides to those cells and only those cells. A variation on this strategy involves the use of antibody fragments and even smaller "molecular recognition units" like somatostatin and endothelin. Antibody and peptide carriers that can be used to detect and treat cancer are being developed (Hinkle, 1993; Serafini, 1993, Sugarbaker, 1993). Two are currently available for diagnostic purposes, and commercial companies are examining the use of dozens of new proprietary peptides as antitumor agents (Brice, 1994).

Because nuclides that emit radiation with different relative levels of biological effectiveness and ranges of action are available, an advantage of radioimmunotheraphy is the potential for choosing a radionuclide with physical characteristics that are compatible with a particular tumor type. Reviews discussing the potential utility of a variety of nuclides for antibody-mediated radiotherapy have been provided by Jungermann et al. (1984), Humm (1986), Cobb and Humm (1986), and Zalutsky (1992), but the majority of clinical radioimmunotherapeutic trials to date have used iodine-131 as the radionuclide. Although iodine-131 will probably be an adequate label for some therapeutic applications (particularly if improved labeling methods are used), in many circumstances, other nuclides might offer significant advantages (e.g., yttrium-90). Factors for consideration in selecting a nuclide for therapy include tumor size, proximity of the tumor to radiation-sensitive normal tissue, and the radiosensitivity of the tumor itself. The

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×

ideal nuclide for treating a 0.5- to 1.0-kg advanced-stage liver tumor is likely to be different from the one selected to treat micrometastases of only a few hundred cells. In addition, the degree of heterogeneity in tumor dose deposition that results from regional variations in tumor blood flow, permeability, and antigen expression will dictate the relative efficacy of using radiation. Much work remains to be done in developing radioimmunotherapeutic strategies, and this type of therapy will probably be most useful, at least initially, as an adjunct to less specific forms of treatment such as surgery, chemotherapy, and external-beam radiotherapy. Numerous observers nevertheless see this approach as the door to a whole new era of nuclear medicine (Brice, 1994; Fischman et al., 1993; Schenter, 1993).

SUPPLIES AND SUPPLIERS

Molybdenum-99

Current Sources

In recent years there has been considerable concern about the availability of 99Mo in the United States (e.g., Holmes, 1993; Moody and Peterson, 1992). The sole North American source of this important biomedical isotope is at present a single reactor in Canada. Because 99mTc from the 99Mo/99mTc generator is used in more than 80 percent of nuclear medicine procedures, a guarantee of the continuous availability of 99Mo, which has a 66-hour half-life, is essential. A brief strike at the Canadian processing and shipping plant in 1991 focused attention on the potential problems of a single source of 99Mo, but recently the 99Mo supply situation has stabilized and is slowly becoming broader based.

The dominant worldwide supplier of 99Mo is Nordion International Inc. of Canada, which purchases this radioisotope mainly from a single government reactor (the NRU reactor) at Chalk River, 2 hours away from Nordion's processing facilities in Kanata, Ontario, Canada. A second reactor for 99Mo production by Nordion, the Maple-X reactors, was under construction but is currently on hold pending resolution of a dispute over costs with the Canadian Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. (AECL), a Crown (Canadian government) Corporation that operates all research reactors in Canada. Nordion International, Inc. was formed more than 20 years ago as the Radiochemical Company, a division of AECL. As the Radiochemical Company, it processed and sold reactor isotopes produced by the Research Company of the AECL. In 1991, MDS Health Group Ltd., a private company and Canada's largest diversified health care company, bought the Radiochemical Company for $165 million and renamed it Nordion International, Inc., upon privatization. According to MDS and Nordion, the key to their purchase was a 23-year guaranteed supply contract with AECL, which was then making isotopes with two reactors, the NRU and NRX reactors, and was about to

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×

begin construction of a third, the Maple-X reactor, whose primary purpose would be isotope production. The NRU reactor was down for repairs for nearly all of 1991, but Nordion was able to meet customer demand from the NRX reactor. The NRX reactor itself was shut down for repairs in January 1992, and in March 1993 the AECL announced that it would not reopen, leaving Nordion without a backup reactor until completion of the Maple-X reactor. In November 1993 AECL announced that despite the $40 million that it had sunk into costs for design, licensing, and a building, projected costs for the Maple-X reactor had grown too high to allow completion. Apparently, neither AECL nor MDS anticipated that the $165 million paid by the latter for Nordion would not go to AECL, but instead would simply disappear into the federal government's consolidated revenue fund.

MDS has filed a lawsuit claiming breach of contract and has asked the court to order AECL to complete construction or pay MDS $300 million in compensation. In a separate action, Nordion and AECL have entered into a prearranged arbitration process as set out in a 1988 agreement. At issue in that process is AECL claim that unforeseen events had forced the closure of the NRX reactor and raised production costs to the extent that AECL is entitled to renegotiate the supply contract.

Arbitration hearings were to begin sometime in the Spring of 1994, but they have been delayed until completion of a report on possible solutions commissioned by the Canadian government's Office of Energy. In any event, Nordion began searching for alternate backup arrangements a year earlier when it became clear that the NRX reactor would not be reactivated. After unsuccessful negotiations with a number of North American reactors, Nordion has struck an agreement with the Institute National des Radioéléments (IRE) in Fleurus, Belgium. IRE can use any of four European reactors for the irradiation of targets: BR-2 in Belgium, SILOE and OSIRIS in France, and HFR in Petten, The Netherlands. All processing takes place at Fleurus, the site of Nordion's European operations. IRE was expected to be capable of producing 50 percent of the world's 99Mo requirements by mid-1994. Table 3-3 provides information about a number of other reactors around the world capable of producing substantial amounts of 99Mo. In most cases a decision to produce 99Mo for sale would require considerable time and money for processing and distribution arrangements. Staff at one of these sites, the University of Missouri Research Reactor (MURR), informed the committee of a much simpler plan that would maintain a supply of 99Mo in case of difficulties with the Chalk River reactor. When Nordion was just beginning its search for backup capabilities, MURR proposed that unprocessed sections of spent reactor fuel be shipped to Nordion for extraction of 99Mo. Such sections would contain several thousand curies of 99Mo, just like the fuel elements normally extracted from the AECL NRU reactor. Details of the cost and feasibility of the plan have not been worked out, but it seems reasonable to investigate whether this can be a cost-effective near-term solution to concerns about reliance on a single reactor for 99Mo.

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×

TABLE 3-3 Reactors with Significant Isotope Production Capability

Country

Location

Reactor

Power (MW)

Isotopes Currently Produced

United States

Hanford, Washington

FFTF

400

None; reactor in standby mode

Idaho

ATR

250

60Co, 63Ni, 192Ir, 153Gd

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

HFIR

100

252Cf and other transuranics, 85Kr, 64Cu, 67Cu, 117mSn, 195mPt, others

Brookhaven National Laboratory

HFBR

60

47Sc, 55Fe, 64/67Cu, 119Sn, 153Sm, 186Re 198/199Au, others

University of Missouri

MURR

10

32P, 192Ir, 35S, 198Au, 186Re, 51Cr, 103Pd, many others

Los Alamos National Laboratory

OWR

8

None; possible production of 99Mo

Georgia Tech

GTTR

5

90Y, 24Na, 18F, 140La

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

MITR-II

5

165Dy, 166Ho, 198Au

New Mexico

Sandia

2

None; possible production of 99Mo

Oregon State

OSTR

1

Variety

Belgium

Mol

BR-2

100

99Mo, 133Xe, 131I, 192Ir, others

Sweden

Nykoping

Studsvik

50

32P, 60Co, 192Ir, 89Sr, 90Y, others; principal supplier for Amersham

The Netherlands

Petten

HFR

45

99Mo, 133Xe, 131I, 192Ir, others

Canada

Chalk River

NRU

40

99Mo, 60Co, 14C, 32P, 89Sr, 90Y, 125I, 131I, 137CS, 133Xe, 192Ir

France

Saclay

OSIRIS

70

99Mo, 133Xe, 131I, 192Ir, others

Grenoble

SILOE

35

99Mo, 133Xe, 131I, 192Ir, others

Poland

Warsaw

Maria

30

Possible fission products

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×

Country

Location

Reactor

Power (MW)

Isotopes Currently Produced

Australia

Sydney

HIFAR

10

99Mo, 64Cu, 67Cu, 153Sm, 166Dy, 186Re, 188Re, 198Au

Russia

Chelyabinsk

Mayak

Unknown

137Cs, 60Co, 14C, 3H, 88Kr

Obninsk

IPPE

Unknown

131/132/133I, 32/33P, 133Xe, 99Mo, 140Ba, 95Zr, 95Nb, 137Cs, 147Pm

Dimitrovgrad

SM3

Unknown

33P, 60Co, 192Ir, 153Gd, 252Cf

Unknown

SM2

100

192Ir, 60Co

Moscow

Unknown

Unknown

99Mo/99mTc, 98Mo

South Africa

Pelindaba

Safari

20

99Mo

Future Sources

One of Nordion's biggest customers, Mallinckrodt Medical Inc., has recently secured its own backup supply of 99Mo by building additional facilities at the reactor site at Petten, The Netherlands, Mallinckrodt's current plan is to produce enough 99Mo to meet its own needs in both Europe and North America but not to go into competition with Nordion for the world market. Their action will substantially reduce that market nevertheless.

DOE, partly in response to the concerns expressed by the U.S. nuclear medicine community, is seriously considering resuming the production of 99Mo using one of two small reactors until recently devoted to defense missions. The Atomic Energy Commission produced 99Mo at the Brookhaven and Oak Ridge National Laboratories until mid-1966, when it stopped production in deference to U.S. commercial production and sales by Union Carbide in Tuxedo, NY, and later, at the General Electric Test Reactor in Pleasanton, Calif. The latter closed in 1977, and Union Carbide's successor, Cintichem, shut down the Tuxedo reactor in 1990. The Isotope Production and Distribution Program (IPDP), with the aid of some quarter of a million dollars from the radiopharmaceutical industry, immediately began a feasibility study that ultimately pointed to the underutilized Omega West reactor at Los Alamos National Laboratory as a potentially viable source of 99Mo and other reactor isotopes (Public Law 101-101, the Energy and Water Development Appropriations Act of 1990, required isotope production and distribution to be self-supporting as of fiscal year 1990). DOE bought the relevant technology from Cintichem and invested $3.5 million dollars for process devel-

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×

opment at Los Alamos National Laboratory, only to have the reactor shut down by a leaking coolant pipe. In addition, the current reactor operator, DOE's Defense Programs division announced plans to halt all use of the reactor, leaving IPDP with all operating costs. In the interim, the major buyers have signed long-term contracts with Nordion or other suppliers, reducing prospects for substantial DOE sales. Additional defects have been discovered since the reactor shut down, the repair of which could cost more than $10 million. Largely because of these recent events, the small (2-megawatt [MW] annular core research reactor at Sandia National Laboratory has been receiving serious consideration as a producer of 99Mo. Start-up costs and perhaps operating costs would be lower, although production capacity would likely be reduced as well.

Although the long-term supply of 99Mo will probably depend in large measure on the outcome of the Maple-X reactor dispute, the committee is convinced that the short-term situation is no longer precarious. Furthermore, the committee is not convinced that DOE can penetrate the market sufficiently at this point to make 99Mo a significant source of net revenue. The committee therefore recommends against government support of a dedicated domestic reactor for 99Mo production.

The Advanced Neutron Source (ANS), a new 330-megawatt (MW) research reactor currently proposed for construction at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, is a potential source for the cost-effective production of 99Mo sometime after 2003. The primary research, education, and training missions of this $2 billion to $3 billion reactor center do not include isotope production at the moment, but focus on condensed-matter research and materials analysis. Its very high rate of neutron production will allow for the high-quantity, high-quality production of any radioisotopes that can be produced by a reactor, and DOE has identified it as a potential future source of isotopes, ''to the extent permitted by its primary mission" (White, 1993). Commercial production of 99Mo or any other short-lived isotope is a major commitment, however, and it is the perception of many of DOE's present isotope customers that IPDP's second-class status at the present facilities is a major hurdle to efficient operation of both IPDP and its customers. If ANS is to be the nation's primary source of reactor isotopes, DOE must ensure the availability of appropriate ports and retrieval vehicles in the design of this reactor and equitable treatment of isotope customers in the plans for its administration. A recent report by Mirzadeh et al. (1944) on the projected capabilities of ANS is very encouraging. It makes it very clear that as the the successor to the High Flux Isotope Reactor, ANS is envisioned as a powerful resource for the production of radioisotopes for a wide variety of scientific and industrial applications.

Research and Development on Alternative Sources

Unlike many reactor-produced radionuclides, which are created by the capture of neutrons from the reactor core by a target nucleus, 99Mo is a fission product, one of the pieces into which highly enriched uranium-235 breaks when it is bom-

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×

barded by the reactor's neutrons. The yield of 99Mo is less than 10 percent, with the remainder largely being long-lived radioactive waste. Public concern over radioactive waste provides significant economic and political incentives for the development of alternate methods for the production of this isotope.

The committee was informed of concepts developed by two different groups in the United States for accelerator-based methods for the production of 99Mo. In one of these, the "Molytron" concept (Schmidt, 1993), the primary beam is high energy protons (60 to 150 million electron volts [MeV], whereas the other, advocated by Morgan (1993) of the North Texas Research Institute, proposes using neutrons generated via accelerator-based methods at low energy.

A different approach is being attempted by researchers at the University of Missouri who have used patented gel technology to develop a 99Mo/ 99mTc generator that produces low-specific-activity 99Mo by neutron activation of 98 instead of the high-specific-activity 99Mo fission product (University of Missouri Research Reactor Center, 1994).

These technologies are far from proven at this point and are competing with a very successful and strongly established commercial operation. The committee recommends that DOE not solicit or evaluate proposals for the development of such methods, but rather leave that work to the private sector.

Other Commercial Radionuclides

Table 3-4 shows the estimated 1992 revenues to reactor operators or their packaging and distributing partners from their best selling products. As mentioned above, there are no real leaders beyond 99Mo and cobalt-60, which is used for external-beam radiation therapy. Unlisted but close behind the other isotopes in table 3-4 would be strontium-89 (which could jump up the list now that it has received approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as an analgesic for bone cancer). Nordion, because its focus is on high -volume, high-revenue isotopes, dominates the market for these radionuclides as well. As in the case of 99Mo, DOE reactors were once prime sources of these isotopes, but DOE with drew from production in deference to domestic commercial suppliers who have since gone out of business. At present DOE controls a large share of the market only for californium-252, iridium-192, and tritium (hydrogen-3). All three of these are long-lived and are or will likely be targets of serious competition from Russia and other former Soviet republics. If short-lived reactor-produced radionuclides become important for cancer therapy, however, and Canada's Maple-X reactor is not completed, the number and condition of North American reactors will be inadequate unless the ANS serves as a major producer.

Research Radionuclides

A comparison of Tables 3-1 and 3-4 makes it obvious that however ably Nordion is serving the needs of commercial radioisotope users, medical and

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
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TABLE 3-4 Leading Commercial Reactor-Produced Radioisotopes

Isotope

Half-Life

Estimated 1992 Wholesale Demand (thousands of $)

Molybendum-99

66 h

25,000–33,000

Cobalt-60

5.3 yr

33,000–44,000

Iridium-192

74 days

4,000–5,000

Carbon-14

5,730 yr

2,600–3,000

Xenon-133

5.2 days

2,100—2,600

Hydrogen 3 (tritium)

12 yr

1,600–2,400

Iodine-131

8.0 days

1,600–2,000

Californium-252

2.6 yr

1,500–2,400

Cesium-137

29 yr

1,500—2,000

Iodine-125

60 days

1,200–1,400

Phosphorus-32

14 days

600–1,000

Sulfur-35

87 days

350–500

Yttrium-90

64 h

250–300

 

SOURCES: Arthur Andersen & Co. (1993), except for phosphorus-32 and sulfur-35 (A. Ketring, University of Missouri, personal communication, May 17, 1994) and carbon-14 (C. Marchetti, DuPont-NEN, personal communication, May 18, 1994).

industrial, it is clearly not the driving force in the exploration of new and better uses of radionuclides. In the United States, DOE's national laboratories and DOE-fueled university reactors play a critical role in providing reactor-produced radioisotopes for medical research as well as clinical use, including a number of unique isotopes for medical uses. They produce not only low-demand radioactive and enriched stable isotope products but also a number of associated services to domestic and international customers for medical, research, and industrial applications. However, isotope programs have always depended on the "parasitic" use of reactors, whose primary use was not related to isotope production, and the declining budgets have severely affected the operating times of these reactors, resulting in a curtailed supply of isotopes. Furthermore, the revolving fund provided by the Energy and Water Development Appropriations Act of 1990 (Public Law 101-101) along with the mandate to become financially self-sufficient through sales is already deeply in the red, despite the fact that costs of reactor isotopes have increased beyond the reach of many researchers. This has led to a severe reduction in the development of new radiopharmaceuticals at the very time when research is moving at a rapid pace in complementary areas like molecular biology and cancer diagnosis and treatment (Holmes, 1993).

Although there are a number of large research reactors at universities in the United States, the primary U.S. source of research radionuclides is MURR. In 1993, 56 of 157 MURR publications were on biomedical or life science projects (University of Missouri Research Reactor Center, 1994). Only MURR is cur-

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
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rently producing a substantial number of radionuclides for use in research in radiopharmaceuticals. Isotopes, irradiation, and related services are supplied to approximately 300 clients in 45 industries, 7 state and federal laboratories, and 31 other universities. The shipments of radionuclides over the past year from MURR as well as the medical and nonmedical applications of these isotopes are listed in Table 3-5. Clients are typically charged only the incremental costs for production of the radioisotopes, with the major proportion of the center's $8 million annual operating costs coming from the state of Missouri, research grants, and non-radioisotope-related services (e.g., topaz irradiation to provide its characteristic color). Income from the last of these sources, much like that from DOE sales of enriched stable isotopes, has recently become threatened by the predatory pricing policy of Russian reactor facilities.

Since 1970, DOE's Office of Energy Research has provided the fuel required to operate some 37 (originally 76) university research and training reactors and, since 1987, has been supporting the conversion of designated university reactors from using highly enriched uranium fuel to using low-enrichment uranium fuel (as part of international nuclear weapons nonproliferation activity). However, DOE has not provided support for the operational costs and facility renovation at university reactors in the past (Riggs, 1993), and recent DOE budget constraints do not allow DOE to provide this support.

It is instructive to review the support of reactors in Western Europe. The National Research Council report (1988) on university research reactors indicated that base support in Western Europe for the operation of individual programs is higher than that in the United States. The base support for two major university research reactor-type reactors (Berlin and Munich in Germany) was $2.5 million each in 1985. Federal support for university reactors in the United States, that is, providing fuel, came to only about $2 million for all 40 university research reactors active in 1987. In addition, significant funding for major upgrades and new equipment has been available to the European reactor centers ($50 million for renovations in Berlin and more than $100 million for a new reactor in Munich).

The National Research Council report (1988) went on to recommend that $20 million be made available annually, for at least 3 years, to support university research reactors for facility upgrades (recognizing that as some are upgraded, others might have to be closed) and operational costs (recognizing that simply matching university contributions would generate a federal share of $37 million). Special appropriations of $1 million a year in fiscal years 1990 to 1993 for some specific instrumentation is all that has resulted from that report. The present committee believes that the observations of the 1988 report are still valid and that the $10 million to $20 million being considered for support of the Omega West or the Sandia National Laboratory reactors would be better spent on radionuclide production at university research reactors, especially the larger ones, and specifically the University of Missouri Research Reactor Center.

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
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TABLE 3-5 Isotopes Produced at University of Missouri Research Reactor

Radioisotope

Primary Uses

Quantity (Ci) Shipped from July 1992 to July 1993

Sodium-24

Hypertension research and tracer for power reactors

12

Silicon-31

Materials research

172

Phosphorus-32

Therapy for bone cancer (in use)a,b

7,964

Sulfur-35b

Radiolabeled biological compounds (DNA)

5,064

Calcium-45

Biochemistry research tracer

16

Scandium-46

Biochemistry research tracer and liquid flow tracer

4.3

Calcium-47

Biochemistry research tracer

0.002

Chromium-51

Diagnosis of blood cell volume (in use); biochemistry research tracer

697

Iron-55

Biochemistry research tracer

115

Cobalt-58

Positron source for materials science research

5.8

Iron-59

Biochemistry research tracer

5.7

Cobalt-60

Therapy for cancer (in use); sterilization source and calibration source

0.2

Nickel-63

Detectors for smoke, explosives, analytical instruments

76

Copper-64

Diagnosis of and therapy for cancer (clinical trials)c; biochemistry tracer, materials research

2.0

Zinc-65

Biochemistry research tracer

0.05

Copper-67

Biochemistry research tracer

0.01

Selenium-75

Biochemistry research tracer

16

Strontium-85

Biomedical tracer

1.3

Rubidium-86

Biochemistry research tracer

8.2

Zirconium-95

Calibration source

1.0

Palladium-103

Therapy for prostate cancer (in use)

1.99

Ruthenium-103

Instrument calibration source

1.3

Rhodium-105

Therapy for cancer (proposed)d

0.2

Palladium-109

Therapy for (proposed), cancer

0.1

Silver-110m

Chemical tracer, gamma calibration source

1.8

Tin-113

Decays to indium-113m

6.6

Cadmium-115

Therapy for arthritis (proposed)

0.03

Tin-119m

Chemical tracer, gamma calibration source

0.03

Tellurium-123m

Mossbauer source; lung, heart research

0.04

Antimony-124

Oil well tracer

5.4

Tellurium-125m

Mossbauer source

0.007

Tellurium-129m

Mossbauer source

0.001

Barium-133

Calibration source for detectors, gamma cameras

0.2

Samarium-145

Therapy for cancer (proposed)

0.1

Samarium-153

Therapy for bone cancer (clinical trials) materials research

51

Gadolinium-153

Diagnosis of osteoporosis (in use)

4.9

Europium-154

Calibration standard

0.02

Terbium-160

Gamma source

0.4

Dysprosium-165

Therapy for arthritis (clinical trials)

2.3

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×

Radioisotope

Primary Uses

Quantity (Ci) Shipped from July 1992 to July 1993

Dysprosium-166

Therapy for cancer (proposed)

0.005

Holmium-166

Therapy for leukemia, cancer, arthritis (clinical trials)

79

Ytterbium-169

Radiography source

344

Thulium-170

Therapy for leukemia (proposed)

54

Ytterbium-175

Therapy for cancer (proposed)

49

Lutetium-177

Therapy for cancer (clinical trials)

54

Tantalum-182

Gamma ray source for materials research

0.04

Rhenium-186

Therapy for bone cancer (clinical trials)

1,476

Rhenium-188

Therapy for thyroid, bone cancers (clinical trials)

2.5

Osmium-191

Decays to iridium-191m; diagnosis

30

Iridium-192

Therapy for cancer (in use); materials testing; oil well tracer; commercial materials testing

5,922

Platinum-195m

Diagnosis and therapy for cancer (clinical trials)

0.6

Gold-198

Therapy for cancer (in use)

2,845

Gold-199

Therapy for cancer (proposed)

2.2

Mercury-203

Calibration source

1.3

Thallium-204

Beta calibration source

6.1

a In use indicates that it is currently approved for human use and marketed in the United States.

b Phosphorus-32 and sulfur-35 are the most widely used radioisotopes for biochemical and biomedical research. Programs in genetic engineering, the human genome, cell metabolism, etc., all depend on the availability of these radioisotopes.

c Clinical trials indicates that the isotope is being tested in U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved human clinical trials.

d Proposed indicates that the isotopes is under scientific investigation but not yet in clinical trials.

Market Analyses

Proponents of the Fast Flux Test Facility, a 400-MW DOE reactor at the Hanford site in the state of Washington scheduled for decommissioning, have predicted an explosive growth in demand for new approaches to radiotherapy, that is, 1.6 million new cancer cases each year in the United States. The business plan produced for the facility by the Freeman School of Business at Tulane University and the Levy Rosenblum Institute in September 1993 projects a global wholesale market (raw isotopes, not radiopharmaceutical end products) of close to a $1 billion by 2002, a 10-fold increase primarily because of therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals. Other observers have been far less optimistic. Landis et al. (1993), although still projecting substantial growth, caution that the Tulane plan assumes U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval of a large number of radiopharmaceuticals that are now in the research or clinical testing stage. The

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×

timing of these approvals and the cost-effectiveness of the techniques employing the radiopharmaceuticals will determine the extent of actual use of the radioisotopes, making the Tulane assumptions speculative at best.

Arthur Andersen & Co. (1993), in a management study for DOE, is more conservative, pointing out that the isotope market is characterized by high barriers to entry, producers who are government owned or rely on government-owned facilities, and demand driven by less than a handful of major commercial customers. In its market analysis and advice to DOE, it assumed modest annual growth (5 to 10 percent) in the overall radioisotope market, with no large change in the market profile (i.e., cobalt-60 at 40 percent and 99Mo at 34 percent will continue to dominate sales). In fact, their data, substantiated in testimony to the committee by Evans (1993), show that at present no other single radioisotope accounts for more than 5 percent of the market. The rest of the reactor-produced radionuclides, although many in number, are used mainly by researchers, who constitute only 2 percent of the radioisotope market in dollars.

CONCLUSIONS

  1. In the short term the supply of reactor-produced radionuclides for commercial use, including 99Mo, is sufficient. Radiopharmaceutical companies state that the present domestic and foreign suppliers are reliable and have or will soon sign long-term supply contracts with existing producers.

  2. In the long term if short-lived reactor-produced radionuclides become important for cancer therapy, the present number and condition of production reactors in North America will be inadequate.

  3. A federally supported U.S. reactor for the production of research radioisotopes is definitely justified. At present, MURR is playing a major role as the supplier of radionuclides for research facilities and radiopharmaceutical manufacturers. Federal support at present is limited to the provision of reactor fuel and peer-reviewed research grants.

RECOMMENDATIONS

  1. In view of the demonstrated reliability of the current sources of commercially valuable isotopes and their steps to secure adequate backup, the committee recommends that the Omega West reactor at Los Alamos National Laboratory or reactors at other facilities NOT be reopened as a dedicated source of molybdenum-99 and other reactor-produced isotopes.

  2. To ensure the continued supply of radionuclides (other than molybdenum-99) for medical and research facilities, the committee recommends core support for reactor-based isotope production. The University of Missouri Research Reactor appears to be the best currently available facility that can meet this need.

Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
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Because reactors have finite lifetimes and because future demands may exceed current capabilities, the committee recommends that DOE ensure that plans for the Advanced Neutron Source reactor reflect the importance of isotope production, and in particular, molybdenum-99, by providing funding at an appropriate amount to ensure availability.

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Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
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A view looking down into the nine accelerating stations of the proton LINAC at Brookhaven National Laboratory. The LINAC is almost 600-feet long and accelerates the protons to an energy of 200 MeV. The protons are used for isotope production in the Brookhaven Linac Isotope Producer. SOURCE: Brookhaven National Laboratory.

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Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
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Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
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Page 48
Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
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Page 49
Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×
Page 50
Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×
Page 51
Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×
Page 52
Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×
Page 53
Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×
Page 54
Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
×
Page 55
Suggested Citation:"3 REACTOR-PRODUCED RADIONUCLIDES." Institute of Medicine. 1995. Isotopes for Medicine and the Life Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4818.
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Page 56
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Radioactive isotopes and enriched stable isotopes are used widely in medicine, agriculture, industry, and science, where their application allows us to perform many tasks more accurately, more simply, less expensively, and more quickly than would otherwise be possible. Indeed, in many cases—for example, biological tracers—there is no alternative. In a stellar example of "technology transfer" that began before the term was popular, the Department of Energy (DOE) and its predecessors has supported the development and application of isotopes and their transfer to the private sector. The DOE is now at an important crossroads: Isotope production has suffered as support for DOE's laboratories has declined. In response to a DOE request, this book is an intensive examination of isotope production and availability, including the education and training of those who will be needed to sustain the flow of radioactive and stable materials from their sources to the laboratories and medical care facilities in which they are used. Chapters include an examination of enriched stable isotopes; reactor and accelerator-produced radionuclides; partnerships among industries, national laboratories, and universities; and national isotope policy.

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