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3 CENTERS FAVORED

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Proposals to build three new cancer centers received an early endorsement yesterday

Date published: 8/27/2008

BY JIM HALL

Local cancer patients will have more treatment options according to plans endorsed yesterday by a regional health planning agency.

The Northwestern Virginia Health Systems Agency voted to recommend approval of new cancer centers in Stafford and Spotsylvania counties and the town of Culpeper. The centers will house the equipment needed to deliver radiation therapy to cancer patients.

The agency's board of directors made the recommendation after a public hearing in Culpeper.

If approved, the centers would open in 2009 and 2010 and would be housed at the Stafford Hospital Center, the Spotsylvania Regional Medical Center and Culpeper Regional Hospital. Stafford and Spotsylvania are new hospitals now under construction.

"I'm excited," said Timothy Tobin, chief executive officer of the Spotsylvania hospital. "I think it's a really important piece of a full-service, acute-care hospital."

The proposals go now to Richmond for review by the Virginia Department of Health and a final decision by Dr. Karen Remley, the state health commissioner.

The review is part of a legal requirement that major health projects in Virginia receive a "certificate of public need."

Officials included cancer centers in their original applications for the Stafford and Spotsylvania hospitals in 2006. The health commissioner approved the new hospitals but deleted radiation therapy as one of the permitted services.

Currently, many local cancer patients receive radiation treatments at the Cancer Center of Virginia, on State Route 3 in Spotsylvania County.

The center has two linear accelerators, machines that deliver targeted doses of radiation. The staff there did about about 14,100 treatments last year.

The center, like the Stafford hospital, is a subsidiary of MediCorp Health System. The Spotsylvania hospital is part of the national HCA chain.

More than half of all cancer patients receive radiation as part of their treatments. Typically, a patient visits a center five days a week for about six weeks. With each visit, the patient receives a dose of radiation directed at the tumor.

Supporters argued that the new centers would reduce travel time for patients.

Stafford and Spotsylvania hospital officials also pointed out that they want to offer stereotactic radiosurgery, an advanced technology not available at the Cancer Center of Virginia.

"Stereotactic radiosurgery is using radiation like a laser beam," said Dr. Jeffrey Poffenbarger, a Fredericksburg neurosurgeon. "You use a series of devices to shape that radiation."


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Stafford Hospital Center

Proposal: Build a cancer treatment center. The center would have a linear accelerator with stereotactic radiosurgery capability and CT simulator.

Location: New building at the hospital site, U.S. 1, Stafford

Opening date: October 2009

Size: 7,795 square feet

Cost: $7 million

Spotsylvania Regional Medical Center

Proposal: Build a cancer treatment center. The center would have a linear accelerator with stereotactic radiosurgery capability, CT simulator and PET/CTimaging.

Location: At the hospital site, U.S. 17 and Interstate 95, Spotsylvania

Opening date: December 2009

Size: 6,810 square feet

Cost: $6.4 million

Culpeper Regional Hospital

Proposal: Build a cancer treatment center. The center would have a linear accelerator.

Location: New building at the hospital site, Sunset Lane, Culpeper

Opening date: July 2010

Size: 7,535 square feet

Cost: $6.6 million


Read more stories about Fredericksburg
Date published: 8/27/2008


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