Mayo Clinic starts foundation and shell of $233 million oncology buildinghttps://www.jaxdailyrecord.com/article/mayo-clinic-starts-foundation-and-shell-of-dollar233-million-oncology-building (Courtesy of the Jacksonville Daily Record) — In June 2019, Mayo announced it would build the 140,000-square-foot project on the campus. Punsky said the building size has grown substantially.
Mayo Clinic said it is investing $211 million for the integrated oncology facility support tower and advanced radiation equipment, including proton beam, and $22 million for parking and patient walkways.
Mayo said the project will be near the Mangurian Building, which houses hematology and oncology care, and the Oncology Infusion Center. A news release said keeping the services close together will best serve Mayo’s cancer patients and further integrate cancer care on the Florida campus.
“This facility will give us the ability to offer our patients the full spectrum of cancer treatment options, including chemotherapy, immunotherapy, CAR-T cell therapy (chimeric antigen receptor therapy T cell therapy), surgery, proton beam therapy, gamma knife radiosurgery and traditional radiotherapy,” said Dr. Kent Thielen, CEO of Mayo Clinic in Florida, in the 2019 announcement.
He said it would give patients access to proton beam therapy clinical trials offered through Mayo’s National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center.
Mayo Clinic said the proton beam therapy program uses pencil beam scanning to deliver precise radiotherapy with lower doses of radiation to healthy tissue, “subsequently reducing toxicity and negative side effects in patients.”
Mayo said the targeted therapy “is ideal for people with tumors close to, or in, vital organs.”
Mayo Clinic said it successfully introduced proton beam therapy at its campuses in Rochester, Minnesota, in 2015 and in Phoenix in 2016.
Rendering courtesy of Mayo Clinic