HCM City (VNS/VNA) – -based Cho Ray
Hospital, the leading medical facility in the south, said on December 6 that it
has successfully produced two new radioactive drugs used to diagnose, monitor
and treat prostate cancer and neuroendocrine tumors.
The two drugs are Ga-68 PSMA and Ga-68 Dotatate.
With the successful production of these two types of radioactive
drugs, patients will no longer need to go abroad at high cost to access this
treatment.
Dr. Nguyen Xuan Canh, head of the hospital’s Nuclear Medicine Department, said
that Galium-68 PSMA (Ga-68 PSMA) in prostate cancer and Galium-68 Dotatate
(Ga-68 Dotatate) in neuroendocrine tumours are used widely for patients in
advanced countries around the world.
These two drugs were approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in
2016 and 2020. However, not every country can produce Ga-68 PSMA and Ga-68
Dotatate, Cảnh said.
In Vietnam, if people need a PET/CT scan using these two drugs, they have to go
abroad to do this.
After a long period of research, exchanging expertise, and preparing human
resources for study, the doctor said on November 7, the Department of Nuclear
Medicine successfully mixed and brought the two medicines into use.
“This is also the first unit in Vietnam to produce these two
successfully,” he said.
After nearly a month of application, Cho Ray Hospital has
conducted PET/CT scanning using Ga-68 PSMA for 12 cases of prostate cancer and
PET/CT scanning with Ga-68 Dotatate for nine neuroendocrine tumours.
“Since 2009, has performed PET/CT imaging with the drug F-18
FDG to evaluate glucose metabolism in many types of cancer. However, prostate
cancer and neuroendocrine tumour cells rarely use glucose, so the diagnostic
results are not high,” Canh said.
“Meanwhile, using Ga-68 PSMA and Ga-68 Dotatate in PET/CT imaging will provide
more accurate diagnostic results, helping clinicians to diagnose better, stage,
choose treatment methods and monitor results,” the doctor said.
The successful production of Ga-68 PSMA and Ga-68 Dotatate has brought many
opportunities to patients, helping them access advanced technical methods in
the world, improving the quality of medical examination and treatment, and
reducing costs for patients, he emphasised.
The PET/CT technique is a high-tech and potential imaging diagnostic system
that offers many advantages in diagnosing, monitoring, and treating diseases
such as cancer and neurological and cardiovascular disorders.
This technique has been applied at Cho Ray Hospital since 2009, with an average
of 12-15 cases of PET/CT scanning per day./.
Source: VietnamPlus