6.5. RECOMMENDATIONSThe committee formulated two recommendations to meet the future needs for radiopharmaceutical development for the diagnosis and treatment of human disease and to overcome national impediments to their entry into the practice of health care.
RECOMMENDATION 1
: Enhance the federal commitment to nuclear
medicine research. Given the somewhat different orientations of the DOE
and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) toward nuclear medicine
research, the two agencies should find some cooperative mechanism to
support radionuclide production and distribution; basic research in radio
nuclide production, nuclear imaging, radiopharmaceutical/radiotracer and
therapy development; and the transfer of these technologies into routine
clinical use.
Implementation Action 1A1: A national nuclear medicine research program should be coordinated by the DOE and NIH, with the former emphasizing the general development of technology and the latter disease-specific applications.
Implementation Action 1A2: In developing their strategic plan, the agencies should avail themselves of advice from a broad range of authorities in academia, national laboratories and industry; these authorities should include experts in physics, engineering, chemistry, radiopharmaceutical science, commercial development, regulatory affairs, clinical trials, and radiation biology.
RECOMMENDATION 2:
Encourage interdisciplinary collaboration.
DOE-OBER should support collaborations between basic chemistry and
physics laboratories, as well as multi-disciplinary centers focused on nuclear
medicine technology development and application, to stimulate the flow of
new ideas for the development of next-generation radiopharmaceuticals
and imaging instrumentation.