In the News

Bad Berka, Germany

With over 350 participants from 30 countries representing the 5 continents, the 1st World Congress on GA68 and PRRNT marks a historical moment in the history of imaging and therapy for individuals with Neuroendocrine tumors as well as other diseases that can be imaged with GA68.

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The final program has been announced for the 1st World Congress on Ga-68 and Peptide Receptor Radionuclide Therapy to be held June 23rd-26th, 2011 in Bad Berka, Germany.

Please click here to download the agenda.


Response, Survival, and Long-Term Toxicity After Therapy With the Radiolabeled Somatostatin Analogue [90Y-DOTA]-TOC in Metastasized Neuroendocrine Cancers.

Published in Journal of Clinical Oncology,  2011 May 9;[Epub Ahead of Print], A Imhof, P Brunner, N Marincek, M Briel, C Schindler, H Rasch, HR Mäcke, C Rochlitz, J Müller-Brand, MA Walter

To read a review of the JCO article please visit OncologyStat (free registration is required to read the summary of findings.)

1st World Congress on Ga-68 and Peptide Receptor Radionuclide Therapy

THERANOSTICS – on the Way to Personalized Medicine

Since 1997, when he first used the radiolabeled peptide Y-90 DOTATOC (a somatostatin anlogue) to treat a 15-year-old boy with a rare neuroendocrine tumor, called paraganglioma, and saw the boy go from being wheelchair-bound and in terrible pain to a young man of 20 who was walking and playing soccer, Prof. Dr. med. Richard P. Baum has been passionate about Peptide

certificate_ENETSJanuary 2011 - European Neuroendocrine Tumor Society has certified Zentralklink Bad Berka as an ENETS Centers of Excellence.  The certification states that center meets all quality standards defined by ENETS for interdisciplinary diagnostics, medical treatment and aftercare of patients with neuroendocrine tumors.  Click here to download a copy of the certificate.

Experts Say Treatment Experimental, Expensive and Possibly Effective

"It shrinks tumors in about a third of cases significantly, and it lasts on average about two to three years," said Strosberg."Even though you get tumor shrinkage, you mostly get disease progression that stabilizes," said Dr. Thomas O'Dorisio, professor of medicine at the University of Iowa in Iowa City. Experts believe the FDA will eventually approve PRRT.

"The data are coming out slowly. There's never been a phase 3