1st Edition

Radiotheranostics - A Primer for Medical Physicists II Radiochemistry, Radiobiology, Dosimetry, Safety, Economics, and AI

Edited By Cari Borrás Copyright 2026
276 Pages 42 Color & 10 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

276 Pages 42 Color & 10 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

Radiotheranostics - A Primer for Medical Physicists II: Radiochemistry, Radiobiology, Dosimetry, Safety, Economics, and AI expands upon the radiotheranostic topics in cancer care covered in Volume I, which includes cancer biology, clinical applications, radionuclide production, source calibration, imaging instrumentation, and staff education, training, and competencies. Building on these... Read more

List of Common Acronyms

Chapter 1. Radiotheranostics: Challenges Today

by Dale L. Bailey 

Chapter 2. Radiopharmaceutical Preparations and Radiolabeling Strategies

by Ehab Al-Momani, Eman Awad, and James Lamb

Chapter 3. New Insights Into the Radiation Biology of Radiotheranostics

by Yaser Gholami and Dale L. Bailey

Chapter 4.  Radiation Embryology: Human and Animal Studies

by Cari Borrás

Chapter 5. Alpha- and Beta-particle Therapy and Dosimetry

by Robert F. Hobbs

Chapter 6. Auger Emitters

by Pablo Minguez Gabiña and John Roeske

Chapter 7. Positrons: Their Potential Role in Radionuclide Therapy

by Takanori Hioki and Dale L. Bailey

Chapter 8. Biokinetic Modelling For Radionuclide Dosimetry

by Augusto Giussani and Alexandra Kamp

Chapter 9. Standardized Tumor and Organ Dosimetry

by Michael G. Stabin

Chapter 10. Image-based Dosimetry Procedures

by Michael Ljungberg

Chapter 11. Combining External Beam Radiotherapy and Radionuclide Therapy

by David Sánchez Artuñedo, Marta Cremonesi, and Michael G. Stabin

Chapter 12. Uncertainties in Dose Calculations

by Bryan P. Bednarz

Chapter 13. Design, Shielding, and Operational Radiation Safety Aspects of the Radiotheranostic Facility

by Michael A. Sheetz

Chapter 14. Management of Deceased Patients Under Treatment (Radioactive Cadavers)

by P. Andrew Karam

Chapter 15. Radiopharmaceutical Regulatory Requirements

by Cari Borrás

Chapter 16. The Economics of Theranostics

by Rodney J. Hicks

Chapter 17. Artificial intelligence in Radiotheranostics

by Ana Maria Marques da Silva

 

Biography

Cari (Caridad) Borrás is a medical physicist in Washington DC, where she works as an international consultant and lecturer, and has an adjunct faculty position at the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences. She holds a Doctor of Science (Physics) degree from the Universitat de Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The research for her doctoral thesis –on the dosimetry and the radiation effects of Astatine-211 on the development of the rat embryo– was performed at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia PA, USA, under a Fulbright scholarship (1966-1973). She is certified in Radiological Physics by the American Board of Radiology (ABR) and in Medical Health Physics by the American Board of Medical Physics and keeps both certifications current. She worked as a radiological physicist at the West Coast Cancer Foundation in San Francisco CA (1974-1988), directed the Radiological Health Program of the Pan American / World Health Organization in Washington DC (1988-2003), joined as Senior Scientist and Director of Special Programs the Institute for Radiological Image Sciences, Inc. in Frederick MD (2003-2004), and was a Visiting Professor at the Universidade Federal de Pernambuco in Recife, Brazil, where she supervised graduated students in medical radiation dosimetry (2009-2011). She is a member of the American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM), American College of Radiology (ACR), Health Physics Society (HPS), Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, and the Spanish Medical Physics (SEFM) and Radiation Protection (SEPR) Societies. She has served on numerous committees of these societies as well as the International Organization for Medical Physics (IOMP), where she chaired the Science Committee (2000-2009); the International Union for Physical and Engineering Sciences in Medicine (IUPESM), where she co-chaired/chaired the Health Technology Task Group (2009-2015), and the European Federation of Organisations for Medical Physics, where she currently is a member of the Scientific Committee. She has lectured in more than 300 courses/congresses, many of which she organized; authored around 100 publications, among them five book chapters, and has edited two books. She is a Fellow of ACR, AAPM, IOMP, HPS and IUPESM, and has been given awards by SEFM, AAPM, IOMP, Latin American Medical Physics Association, American College of Clinical Engineering, ACR and ABR.