
National research program in PET-Nuclear medicine; 180°N
Trond Mohn Foundation (TMF) and Tromsø Research Foundation (TRF) have a common goal to enhance the impact of Trond Mohn´s private donations; PET scanners to the university hospitals in Bergen Tromsø and Trondheim. This ambition was realized by a national research programme pointed at the scientific strengths identified by the research communities at three PET facilities with strong expectations of national cooperation and sharing of best practice.
NEW: 180°N Conference 2023 in Bergen, April 25.-27. Link with more information will follow soon.
Three topics: Tracer development, preclinical and clinical research
‘This co-funding programme with a total value of NOK 160 million gives researchers working in the field of neurological disorders and cancer a fantastic opportunity to develop new treatment methods,’ says Bent Høie. ‘Research is a precondition for improving quality in the specialist health service. I am grateful that the foundations’ donations have made it possible to undertake this significant research initiative, and have great expectations that the results generated from this work will benefit patients.’
Projects coordinated from three cities
The project at Haukeland University Hospital in Bergen, led by Associate Professor Tom Christian Holm Adamsen, will focus on chemical innovation to increase the number of new diagnostic and therapeutic tools available in nuclear medicine, a medical specialisation that uses open radioactive substances in diagnostics and therapy.
The project at the PET centre in Tromsø, led by Associate Professor Rune Sundset, will comprise preclinical research using cancer cells and mice. Radiopharmaceuticals for use in PET (positron emission tomography) and nuclear medicine will be tested in the new pre-clinical facilities at the PET centre in Tromsø using state-of-the-art infrastructure for pre-clinical research in nuclear medicine and radiation biology.
The project in Trondheim, led by Professor Tone Bathen at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), will work on developing and documenting optimal diagnostics and treatment. This will be done by conducting multi-centre studies based on large and relevant patient groups, such as patients with prostate cancer, brain tumours and dementia.
In addition to each of the projects involving researchers from all universities and university hospitals in Bergen, Trondheim and Tromsø, Stavanger University Hospital will also participate as a partner in one of the projects.
– Something we need more of
–Norway needs high-quality research to create better services, treatment and patient services going forward,’ said former Director General of the Research Council of Norway John-Arne Røttingen. ‘To achieve these goals, we need both public and private funding. I think it is excellent that private actors and foundations such as Trond Mohn and Tromsø Research Centre help to enhance health research by stimulating collaboration across disciplines and regions. This is something we need more of, Røttingen said.
– Will make a difference
The Trond Mohn Foundation and Tromsø Research Centre want to make a real difference in terms of both discipline development and the patient treatment of the future, something this programme undoubtedly has the potential to do,’ said Stener Kvinnsland, chair of the Trond Mohn Foundation.
‘We hope the foundations’ initiative can encourage greater collaboration between Norwegian expert communities in this field for the benefit of patients, and look forward to following these research projects,’ said Sveinung Hole, CEO of the Trond Mohn Foundation and chair of Tromsø Research Centre.
cooperative project
The overarching aim of the 180°N project is to strengthen research in nuclear medicine connected to the nuclear medicine equipment donated by Trond Mohn Foundation and Tromsø Research Foundation to the universities and hospitals in Trondheim, Tromsø and Bergen.
This additional joint cooperative project aims to stimulate consortium collaboration and to increase synergy effects between the research projects, thus facilitating the 180°N research projects to reach the goals. The measures are multifaceted;
- To establish an annual conference as a platform for knowledge exchange and network building within 180°N, but also as an arena to obtain stimuli and interact with international researchers and clinicians holding state of the art expertise
- To provide travel grants for skills enhancement
- To provide funding for work package meetings, collaborations and conference participation
- To hire a communication manager
Ingress illustration made by Tom Christian Adamsen
News
180ºN Conference 2024 in Trondheim April 9.-11. Follow this link for program and registration.
Facts about the program
Program web page
Program period: 2019-2024
Funding: 80 MNOK
About the prosjects:
Project lead from Bergen
Title: Center for Nuclear Medicine and PET
Host institution: Haukeland University Hospital
Project leader: Tom Chr. Holm Adamsen
TMS-funding: 25 MNOK
Project lead from Trondheim
Title: Improved diagnostics and treatment through a state-of-the-art multi-center nuclear medicine approach: Applications in cancer and dementia
Host institution: Norwegian University of Science and Technology
Project leader: Tone F. Bathen
TMS-funding: 25 MNOK
Project lead from Tromsø
Title: Targeting tumor microenvironment: Boosting PET-based diagnostics and therapies
Host institution: UiT- The Arctic University of Norway
Project leader: Rune Sundset
TFS-funding: 25 MNOK
Joint cooperative project
Title: 180°N – Norwegian Nuclear Medicine Consortium
Host institution: Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet
Project leader: Tone F. Bathen
Deputy leader: Live Eikenes
TMS-funding: 5 MNOK

Universitetssykehuset Nord Norge/UiT. Foto: Per-Christian Johansen

NTNU: Foto Karl Jørgen Marthinsen

Haukeland universitetssykehus/UiB. Foto: Jørgen Barth/UiB

NTNU: Foto Karl Jørgen Marthinsen