Until this week, Mayo Clinic had tested its $180 million proton beam accelerator only on water, a cadaver and cuts of meat donated by Ye Olde Butcher Shoppe in Rochester.
But Monday, with a turn of a safety key and a press of a "beam on" button, radiation therapist Rebecca Keller sent positively charged protons through a series of powerful magnets, accelerating them to 60 percent of the speed of light, and focused them straight at the bottle cap-sized tumor in the brain of Ashley Sullivan.
Physicists and cancer specialists crowded over Keller's computer in the control room of Mayo's new proton beam center to watch protons pepper the tumor. "That's it," said Michael Herman, the center's chief physicist, once the tumor was coated.
So began one of the most ambitious, costly bets in Mayo's history — an investment in an emerging radiation therapy that Rochester doctors believe will revolutionize cancer care, but which critics believe is wasteful technology that will accelerate the high and rising cost of medicine in the United States.
The proton beam has been promoted as a more precise form of cancer treatment than conventional radiation: Because it can halt the cancer-killing particles at the site of a tumor, it is less likely to expose healthy tissue to harmful radiation.
But proton therapy can cost six times more, and there is insufficient research to determine which types of cancer it treats more effectively. Some insurers are reluctant to pay the bills, while economists have questioned its purpose.
"It is the Death Star of medical technologies," said Amitabh Chandra, a health economist at Harvard University. "Nothing so big and useless has ever been developed before."
In Ashley Sullivan, however, Mayo cancer specialists have found just the right first patient. Research supports its use for certain adult brain tumors and tumors in children, whose longer life spans increase their risk of second cancers and complications from radiation exposure.