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Floridabob Newsletter for January - February, 2008
I think that perhaps the often-quoted phrase: “Methinks thou doth protest too much” sums up the Florida Center for Prostate Care. Faced with the growing acceptance of Proton Beam therapy as evidenced by the number of major research and patient oriented centers that have opened and others scheduled to open, the Florida Center has chosen to use scare techniques against what it evidently considers the competition. With the price of new Proton Centers now running between 150 and 175 million dollars, someone must know something that has escaped the attention of the Florida Center for Prostate Care. That is quite a bit of money to invest in “outdated technology.”
Dr. Morgan began his proton beam treatments December 4, 2007 at the newly opened University of Florida Proton Therapy Institute in Jacksonville, Florida and is writing a book titled “Faith and Proton Therapy vs. Prostate Cancer” about his experiences as they occur.
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AS APPEARED IN THE “U.S.NEWS & WORLD REPORT”
Proton Beam Therapy, an Option Against Prostate Cancer
Last September, I wrote a story about prostate cancer that looked at some of the difficult decisions men in the early stages of the disease face and some of the treatment options available to them. Among those it mentioned: high-intensity focused ultrasound, watchful waiting, robotic surgery, brachytherapy, and (in general terms) radiation therapy. The story did not specifically mention proton beam therapy, a type of radiation therapy that uses nuclear technology to precisely shoot fast-moving ions into tumors. Some doctors say proton therapy reduces the risk of complications, such as impotence and incontinence, in relation to other types of radiation therapy. That omission prompted a flurry of chastening letters, primarily from men who have received proton beam therapy at Loma Linda University Medical Center in California. Proton beam therapy has been available since 1990, when Loma Linda started using it to treat patients. Whether it is actually better than standard radiation—or worth the extra cost—remains somewhat murky, the New York Times has reported. Various other sources suggest that more research ought to be done before concluding that this uncommon and expensive technology is significantly better than standard radiation treatment for prostate cancer. An editorial published recently in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, for example, looks at some of the complicated clinical and economic questions that remain.
January 25, 2008 04:01 PM ET | Voiland, Adam | Permanent Link
Nevertheless, the letter writers are absolutely right. Proton beam therapy is an option worth exploring, and it's now available at the Midwest Proton Radiotherapy Institute, M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, and the University of Florida. Plans are in the works to add the capability at a handful of other institutions across the nation as well.
Want to find out more about proton beam therapy? Organizations like the National Association for Proton Therapy and the Brotherhood of the Balloon, and a book by prostate cancer survivor Robert Marckini called You Can Beat Prostate Cancer, can help fill in the gaps. In fact, I'll be checking in with some of these same folks as I research proton beam therapy in more detail. As I go about this reporting, I welcome input from people interested in the technology.

To read the entire article and comments from 126 Prostate Cancer patients that have received Proton Therapy Treatment.
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