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Home / Health / UK Partnership Turns Uranium into Cancer Drugs

UK Partnership Turns Uranium into Cancer Drugs

16 Dec

•

Summary

  • Biotech firm partners with UK NDA for cancer treatments.
  • Repurposed uranium will yield isotope lead-212.
  • Therapies target difficult cancers like prostate and gut.
UK Partnership Turns Uranium into Cancer Drugs

A significant 15-year alliance has been established between Bicycle Therapeutics and the UK Nuclear Decommissioning Authority. This groundbreaking initiative aims to revolutionize cancer care by developing advanced precision treatments derived from repurposed uranium found in nuclear reactors. The innovative radiopharmaceutical therapies hold the potential to transform the treatment landscape for challenging cancers.

These novel therapies are designed to target and eliminate tumors directly with radiotherapy, a method that promises to minimize adverse side effects. The crucial medical isotope, lead-212, will be extracted from repurposed uranium. This isotope is essential for the development of these highly targeted radiopharmaceutical applications.

The breakthrough treatments are expected to offer new hope for patients battling cancers that have historically been difficult to treat effectively. Cancers such as prostate cancer and neuroendocrine tumors, affecting organs like the gut and pancreas, are primary targets for these innovative therapies, potentially offering a more effective and less toxic approach to treatment.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Bicycle Therapeutics will extract the medical isotope lead-212 from repurposed uranium to create targeted radiopharmaceutical cancer therapies.
This partnership aims to develop treatments for challenging cancers, including prostate cancer and neuroendocrine tumors affecting organs like the gut and pancreas.
Lead-212 is a medical isotope used in radiopharmaceuticals to directly target and deliver radiotherapy to cancer cells, minimizing damage to healthy tissue.

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