The plan was issued at the International Medical Isotope Summit during the annual SNM meeting in Toronto, where key stakeholders in the global nuclear medicine industry--physicians, government agencies, corporations that build nuclear facilities and manufacture medical isotopes--met to discuss the isotope crisis. "This group agreed that the worldwide patient community is facing one of its greatest threats in modern times - the lack of access to a reliable, consistent supply of the most important medical isotopes used in the effective detection and evaluation of patients with cancers, heart and brain diseases and other disorders," according to the SNM communiqué. They stressed their concern over the fact that the vast majority of the worldwide supply of Mo-99 is produced in nuclear facilities located in only six countries: Australia, Belgium, Canada, France, South Africa and the Netherlands. With approximately 80 nations using Mo-99, and the United States consuming nearly one-half of the worldwide Mo-99 supply, "it is clear that too many demands are being placed on too few facilities." With the shutdown on the Chalk River facility and the recent announcement that Canada will not be making isotopes within the next decade, the need to remedy the situation is "far more urgent." Because Mo-99 is currently produced primarily using highly enriched uranium (HEU)-235 (U-235), the same material used to produce nuclear weapons, there are security ramifications related to the use of U-235 in most reactors. "In addition to ensuring the effective safeguarding of HEUs and their by-products, there must be a systematic and orderly transition from HEUs to less volatile materials, such as low-enriched uranium," according to SNM. Call to action In light of these realities, the communique included the following provisions:
"We are determined to meet quarterly to review progress on our commitments and renew the sense of urgency to resolve the medical isotope shortage crisis, both in the short term and long term," stated SNM. "By acting together to fulfill these pledges in a spirit of public-private partnership, we are confident that we can lift the world out of this serious medical crisis and prevent such dangerous disruptions from recurring in the future."
Last updated on June 18, 2009 at 8:55 am EST
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