Contributed photo/TAMC Dr. Arjun Sood, lead medical oncologist for TAMC’s Aroostook Cancer Care Center, explains what being able to offer a PET/CT scan locally will mean to patients in northern Maine during a December 3 press conference. Also taking part in the presentation were, seated from left; Dr. Alan Mautz, a radiologist in TAMC’s Imaging Services Department; Sylvia Getman, president/CEO at the medical center; and Gene Lynch II, chair of TAMC’s Board of Trustees. |
By Anthony Brino
Staff Writer
The Aroostook Medical Center is spending $1.5 million on a new positron emission tomography scanner as part of an effort to offer comprehensive cancer treatment in the region.
A new General Electric PET/CT nuclear imaging scanner is set to arrive next spring at TAMC and will be a more local option for the estimated 300 Aroostook County cancer patients who travel to Bangor each year to have a PET scan, which uses a radioactive tracer to locate and track tumors.
“We will now be able to locally offer the standard for cancer evaluation and ongoing staging of treatment,” said Sylvia Getman, CEO of TAMC, a part of Eastern Maine Health Systems. “It’s an essential component of the whole comprehensive cancer center we’ve put together,” she said, noting TAMC’s new linear accelerator radiation treatment and healing garden.
PET scanners were adopted along with other imaging technologies during the 1990s and 2000s. Eastern Maine Medical Center opened one in 2003. Today it’s a standard tool for physicians, especially for cancers of the lung, head, neck, gastrointestinal tract and lymphomas, said Dr. Arjun Sood, TAMC’s lead oncologist.
“We see quite a bit of these cancers in The County every year,” he said. “A PET scan is an almost indispensable tool.”
It’s taken two years to bring the PET technology to TAMC in part because of the logistics of transporting the radioactive isotopes from Boston. TAMC officials plan to have the supply delivered twice a week, which will allow for a maximum of five patients to be tested on each of the two days. The rest of the time the equipment can serve as a computed tomography scanner, and is replacing an older CT machine.
The PET scanner will join a linear accelerator radiation therapy opened in September, which replaced an aging machine. The new linear accelerator uses a computer-programmed intensity modulated radiation therapy, which used to be a longer manual process, and is also able to offer image-guided radiotherapy and less invasive treatment and surgery.
Contributed photo/TAMC Images from a positron emission tomography scanner. |
“It is an expensive test,” said Randy Bacon, TAMC’s director of ancillary services. “I don’t know what our final charge will be.”
Medicare, along with commercial insurance, covers PET scans for a range of cancers, although the bills for patients varies and can run into the thousands, as with other nuclear imaging tests.
Some New Brunswick or Quebec residents may also end up coming to TAMC and paying out of pocket for a PET scan, Bacon said. The province does have two PET scanners, in Saint John and Moncton, but some residents do cross the border and pay out of pocket for diagnostic tests like MRIs. “We get a fair number of Canadian folks that come over for other imaging tests,” Bacon said.
Along with TAMC, other medical providers in Aroostook County have been focusing on cancer services to meet the incidence of the disease in an aging population. In Caribou, the Cary Medical Center recently renovated its chemotherapy area and oncology clinic.