Wisconsin company ready to produce Mo 99 (David Kramer) USofA

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Link: https://physicstoday.scitation.org/do/10.1063/PT.6.2.20180216a/full/ Please see link above for original text, embedded hotlinks and comments.

Wisconsin company gets the green light to make key medical isotope The FDA-approved product will lessen US dependence on foreign sources of molybdenum-99. David Kramer February 16, 2018

The first US production in 30 years of molybdenum-99, the parent isotope of the most widely used medical radioisotope, is expected to begin within weeks after federal regulators approved a manufacturing process developed by Wisconsin-based NorthStar Medical Radioisotopes. On 8 February the Food and Drug Administration announced its approval of the process NorthStar will use to separate technetium-99m from 99Mo. A 99Mo decay product, 99mTc is a gamma-emitting tracer used for roughly 40 000 nuclear medical imaging procedures daily. NorthStar officials say that they expect to have the capacity to meet two-thirds of US demand for 99Mo. NorthStar’s RadioGenix process yields the 99mTc that’s vital for medical imaging. Credit: NorthStar NorthStar will be the world’s first producer to manufacture 99Mo from feedstock other than uranium. Instead, the isotope will be created when neutrons from a reactor are captured by the naturally occurring 98Mo isotope. Once the 99Mo is chemically recovered, the company’s RadioGenix process will chromatographically separate injectable 99mTc from a saline solution containing the three isotopes of molybdenum. NorthStar’s solution contains the same amount of 99mTc found in the uranium-based product, says James Harvey, NorthStar’s executive vice president and chief scientific officer. NorthStar’s FDA approval is valid only for production at the University of Missouri’s MURR research reactor; the company must obtain separate approvals for 99Mo produced in other reactors.

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Wisconsin company ready to produce Mo 99 (David Kramer) USofA by John A. Shanahan - Issuu