Inside a cavernous corridor on the Swiss-French border, the air hums with excessive voltage and chance. From his perch on the wraparound statement deck, physicist Walter Wuensch surveys a multimillion-dollar array of accelerating cavities, klystrons, modulators, and pulse compressors—{hardware} being readied to drive a brand new era of linear particle accelerators.
Wuensch has spent a long time working with these machines to crack the deepest mysteries of the universe. Now he and his colleagues are aiming at a brand new goal: most cancers. Right here at CERN (the European Group for Nuclear Analysis) and different particle-physics labs, scientists and engineers are making use of the instruments of basic physics to develop a way referred to as FLASH radiotherapy that provides a radical and counterintuitive imaginative and prescient for treating the illness.
CERN researcher Walter Wuensch says the particle physics lab’s work on FLASH radiotherapy is “producing a variety of pleasure.”CERN
Radiation remedy has been a cornerstone of most cancers therapy since shortly after Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen found X-rays in 1895. In the present day, greater than half of all most cancers sufferers obtain it as a part of their care, usually in comparatively low doses of X-rays delivered over dozens of periods. Though this method usually kills the tumor, it additionally wreaks havoc on close by wholesome tissue. Even with fashionable precision focusing on, the potential for collateral injury limits how a lot radiation medical doctors can safely ship.
FLASH radiotherapy flips the standard method on its head, delivering a single dose of ultrahigh-power radiation in a burst that usually lasts lower than one-tenth of a second. In research after research, this system causes considerably much less damage to regular tissue than standard radiation does, with out compromising its antitumor impact.
At CERN, which I visited final July, the method is being examined and refined on accelerators that have been by no means supposed for medication. If ongoing experiments right here and all over the world proceed to bear out outcomes, FLASH may rework radiotherapy—delivering stronger therapies, fewer uncomfortable side effects, and broader entry to lifesaving care.
“It’s producing a variety of pleasure,” says Wuensch, a researcher at CERN’s Linear Electron Accelerator for Analysis (CLEAR) facility. “We accelerator persons are pondering, Oh, wow, right here’s an software of our expertise that has a societal impression which is extra quick than most high-energy physics.”
The Unlikely Beginning of FLASH Remedy
The breakthrough that led to FLASH emerged from a line of experiments that started within the Nineties at Institut Curie in Orsay, close to Paris. Researcher Vincent Favaudon was utilizing a low-energy electron accelerator to check radiation chemistry. Concentrating on the accelerator at mouse lungs, Favaudon anticipated the radiation to provide scar tissue, or fibrosis. However when he uncovered the lungs to ultrafast blasts of radiation, at doses a thousand instances as excessive as what’s utilized in standard radiation remedy, the anticipated fibrosis by no means appeared.
Puzzled, Favaudon turned to Marie-Catherine Vozenin, a radiation biologist at Curie who specialised in radiation-induced fibrosis. “Once I appeared on the slides, there was certainly no fibrosis, which was very, very shocking for any such dose,” recollects Vozenin, who now works at Geneva University Hospitals, in Switzerland.
The pair expanded the experiments to incorporate cancerous tumors. The outcomes upended a long-held trade-off of radiotherapy: the thought which you could’t destroy a tumor with out additionally damaging the host. “This differential impact is de facto what we wish in radiation oncology, not damaging regular tissue however killing the tumors,” Vozenin says.
They repeated the protocol throughout several types of tissue and tumors. By 2014, they’d gathered sufficient proof to publish their findings in Science Translational Medicine. Their experiments confirmed that delivering an ultrahigh dose of 10 grey or extra in lower than a tenth of a second may eradicate tumors in mice whereas leaving surrounding wholesome tissue just about unhurt. For comparability, a typical chest X-ray delivers about 0.1 milligray, whereas a session of standard radiation remedy may ship a complete of about 2 grey per day. (The authors referred to as the impact “FLASH” due to the fast, excessive doses concerned, but it surely’s not an acronym.)
Though many most cancers consultants have been skeptical concerning the FLASH impact on wholesome tissue when it was first introduced in 2014, quite a few research have since confirmed and expanded on these outcomes. In a 2020 paper, a lung tissue pattern taken 4 months after being uncovered to traditional radiotherapy [center] reveals many extra darkish spots indicating scarring than a pattern uncovered to FLASH [right]. The nonirradiated pattern [left] is the management.
Many most cancers consultants have been skeptical. The FLASH impact appeared virtually too good to be true. “It didn’t get a variety of traction at first,” recollects Billy Loo, a Stanford radiation oncologist specializing in lung most cancers. “They described a phenomenon that ran counter to a long time of established radiobiology dogma.”
However within the years since then, researchers have noticed the impact throughout a variety of tumor sorts and animals—past mice to zebra fish, fruit flies, and even a number of human topics, with the identical protecting impact within the mind, lungs, pores and skin, muscle, coronary heart, and bone.
Why this occurs stays a thriller. “We have now investigated a variety of hypotheses, and all of them have been fallacious,” says Vozenin. At present, probably the most believable concept rising from her crew’s analysis factors to metabolism: Wholesome and cancerous cells might course of reactive oxygen species—unstable oxygen-containing molecules generated throughout radiation—in very alternative ways.
Adapting Accelerators for FLASH
On the time of the primary FLASH publication, Lavatory and his crew at Stanford have been additionally targeted on dramatically dashing up radiation supply. However Lavatory wasn’t chasing a radiobiological breakthrough. He was making an attempt to resolve a special drawback: movement.
“The tumors that we deal with are at all times shifting targets,” he says. “That’s notably true within the lung, the place due to respiration movement, the tumors are continuously shifting.”
To convey FLASH remedy out of the lab and into scientific use, researchers like Vozenin and Lavatory wanted machines able to delivering quick, excessive doses with pinpoint precision deep contained in the physique. Most early research relied on low-energy electron beams like Favaudon’s 4.5-megaelectron-volt Kinetron—enough for floor tumors, however unable to achieve various centimeters right into a human physique. Treating deep-seated cancers within the lung, mind, or stomach would require far greater particle energies.
At CERN, researchers engaged on FLASH are growing this {hardware} to spice up electrons to ultrahigh energy inside a brief distance.
CERN
In addition they wanted a substitute for standard X-rays. In a scientific linac, X-ray photons are produced by dumping high-energy electrons right into a bremsstrahlung goal, which is manufactured from a cloth with a excessive atomic quantity, like tungsten or copper. The goal slows the electrons, changing their kinetic power into X-ray photons. It’s an inherently inefficient course of that wastes many of the beam energy as warmth and makes it extraordinarily troublesome to achieve the ultrahigh dose charges required for FLASH. Excessive-energy electrons, in contrast, may be switched on and off inside milliseconds. And since they’ve a cost and may be steered by magnets, electrons may be exactly guided to achieve tumors deep inside the physique. (Researchers are additionally investigating protons and carbon ions; see the sidebar, “What’s the Finest Particle for FLASH Remedy?”)
Lavatory turned to the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in Menlo Park, Calif., the place physicist Sami Gamal-Eldin Tantawi was redefining how electromagnetic waves transfer by linear accelerators. Tantawi’s findings allowed scientists to exactly management how power is delivered to particles—paving the way in which for compact, environment friendly, and finely tunable machines. It was precisely the form of expertise FLASH remedy would want to focus on tumors deep contained in the physique.
In the meantime, Vozenin and different European researchers turned to CERN, finest recognized for its 27-kilometer Giant Hadron Collider (LHC) and the 2012 discovery of the Higgs boson, the “God particle” that provides different particles their mass.
CERN can also be residence to a variety of smaller linear accelerators—together with CLEAR, the place Wuensch and his crew are adapting high-energy physics instruments for medication.
Not like the LHC, which loops particles round an enormous ring to construct up power earlier than smashing them collectively, linear accelerators like CLEAR ship particles alongside a straight, one-time path. That setup permits for higher precision and compactness, making it ultimate for purposes like FLASH.
On the coronary heart of the CLEAR facility, Wuensch factors out the 200-MeV linear accelerator with its 20-meter beamline. That is “a playground of creativity,” he says, for the physicists and engineers who arrive from everywhere in the world to run experiments.
The method begins when a laser pulse hits a photocathode, releasing a burst of electrons that type the preliminary beam. These electrons journey by a collection of exactly machined copper cavities, the place high-frequency microwaves push them ahead. The electrons then transfer by a community of magnets, displays, and focusing parts that form and steer them towards the experimental goal with submillimeter precision.
As a substitute of a steady stream, the electron beam is split into nanosecond-long bunches—billions of electrons driving the radio-frequency area like surfers. Contained in the accelerator’s cavities, the sector flips polarity 12 billion instances per second, so timing is all the things: Solely electrons that arrive completely in part with the accelerating wave will achieve power. That course of repeats by a series of cavities, every giving the bunches one other push, till the beam reaches its remaining power of 200 MeV.
Physicist Marçà Boronat inspects one of many high-precision parts used to speed up the electrons for FLASH radiotherapy.
CERN
A lot of this structure attracts immediately from the Compact Linear Collider study, a decades-long CERN undertaking geared toward constructing a next-generation collider. The proposed CLIC machine would stretch 11 kilometers and collide electrons and positrons at 380 gigaelectron volts. To try this in a linear configuration—with out the a number of passes round a hoop just like the LHC—CERN engineers have needed to push for terribly excessive acceleration gradients to spice up the electrons to excessive energies over comparatively quick distances—as much as 100 megavolts per meter.
Wuensch leads me to a big experimental corridor housing prototype constructions from the CLIC effort, and factors out the microwave units that now assist drive FLASH analysis. Although the way forward for CLIC as a collider stays unsure, its infrastructure is already yielding dividends: smaller, high-gradient accelerators which will in the future be as suited to curing most cancers as they’re for smashing particles.
The facility behind the excessive gradients comes from CERN’s Xboxes, the X-band RF methods that dominate the experimental corridor. Every Xbox homes a klystron, modulator, pulse compressor, and waveguide community to generate and form the microwave pulses. The heartbeat compressors retailer power in resonant cavities after which launch it in a microsecond burst, producing peaks of as much as 200 megawatts; if it have been steady, that’s sufficient to energy no less than 40,000 houses. The Xboxes let researchers fine-tune the facility, timing, and pulse form.
Based on Wuensch, lots of the current accelerator developments have been enabled by advances in laptop simulation and high-precision three-dimensional machining. These instruments permit the crew to iterate rapidly, designing new accelerator parts and bettering beam management with every era.
Nonetheless, real-world challenges stay. The facility calls for are formidable, as are the area necessities; for all of the speak of its “compact” design, the unique CLIC was meant to span kilometers. Clearly, a hospital wants one thing that’s truly compact.
“An enormous problem of the undertaking,” says Wuensch, “is to remodel this sort of expertise and these sorts of parts into one thing that you can think of putting in in a hospital, and it’ll run day by day reliably.”
To that finish, CERN researchers have teamed up with the Lausanne University Hospital (recognized by its French acronym, CHUV) and the French medical expertise firm Theryq to design a hospital facility able to treating massive and deep-seated tumors with the very quick time scales wanted for FLASH and scaled down to slot in a scientific setting.
Theryq’s Method to FLASH
Theryq’s analysis middle and manufacturing unit are situated in southern France, close to the bottom of Montagne Sainte-Victoire, a jagged backbone of limestone that Paul Cézanne painted dozens of instances, capturing its shifting mild and type.
“The answer that we are attempting to develop right here is one thing which is extraordinarily versatile,” says Ludovic Le Meunier, CEO of the increasing firm. “The final word objective is to have the ability to deal with any strong tumor wherever within the physique, which is about 90 p.c of the most cancers today.”
Theryq’s FLASHDEEP system, underneath improvement with CERN and the corporate’s scientific companions, has a 13.5-meter-long, 140-MeV linear accelerator. That’s robust sufficient to deal with tumors at depths of as much as about 20 centimeters within the physique. The affected person will stay in a supported standing place in the course of the split-second irradiation.THERYQ
Theryq’s push to convey FLASH radiotherapy from the lab to clinic has adopted a three-pronged rollout, with every machine engineered for a selected depth and scientific use. The primary machine, FLASHKNiFE, was unveiled in 2020. Designed for superficial tumors and intraoperative use, the system delivers electron beams at 6 or 9 MeV. A prototype put in that very same 12 months at CHUV is conducting a phase-two trial for sufferers with localized pores and skin most cancers.
Extra lately, Theryq launched FLASHLAB, a compact, 7-MeV platform for radiobiology analysis.
The corporate’s most bold system, FLASHDEEP, continues to be underneath improvement. The 13.5-meter-long electron supply will ship very high-energy electrons of as a lot as 140 MeV as much as 20 centimeters contained in the physique in lower than 100 milliseconds. An built-in CT scanner, constructed right into a patient-positioning system developed by Leo Cancer Care, captures photographs that stream immediately into the treatment-planning software program, enabling exact calculation of the radiation dose. “Earlier than we truly set off the beam or the therapy, we make stereo photographs to confirm on the final second that the tumor is precisely the place it ought to be,” says Theryq technical supervisor Philippe Liger.
FLASH Remedy Strikes to Animal Checks
Whereas CERN’s CLEAR accelerator has been instrumental in characterizing FLASH parameters, researchers looking for to check FLASH in residing organisms should look elsewhere: CERN doesn’t permit animal experiments on-site. That’s one purpose why a rising variety of scientists are turning to PITZ, the Picture Injector Check Facility in Zeuthen, a leafy lakeside suburb of Berlin.
PITZ is a part of Germany’s nationwide accelerator lab and is answerable for growing the electron supply for the European X-ray Free-Electron Laser. Now PITZ is rising as a hub for FLASH analysis, with an unusually tunable accelerator and a devoted biomedical lab to make sure managed situations for preclinical research.

At Germany’s Picture Injector Check Facility in Zeuthen (PITZ), the electron-beam accelerator [top] is used to irradiate organic targets in early-stage animal assessments of FLASH radiotherapy [bottom].High: Frieder Mueller; Backside: MWFK
“The largest benefit of our facility is that we are able to do a really stepwise, very outlined and systematic research of dose charges,” says Anna Grebinyk, a biochemist who heads the brand new biomedical lab, “and systematically optimize the FLASH impact to see the place it will get the very best properties.”
The experiments start with zebra-fish embryos, prized for early-stage research as a result of they’re clear and develop quickly. After the embryos, researchers check probably the most promising parameters in mice. To try this, the PITZ crew makes use of a small-animal radiation analysis platform, full with CT imaging and a robotic positioning system tailored from CERN’s CLEAR facility.
What units PITZ aside is the flexibleness of its beamline. The 30-meter accelerator system steers electrons with micrometer precision, producing electron bunches with distinctive brightness and emittance—a metric of beam high quality. “We are able to dial in any distribution of bunches we wish,” says Frank Stephan, group chief at PITZ. “That offers us super management over time construction.”
Timing issues. At PITZ, the laser-struck photocathode generates electron bunches which can be accelerated instantly, at as much as 60 million volts per meter. A quick electromagnetic kicker system acts as a high-speed gatekeeper, selectively deflecting particular person electron bunches from a high-repetition beam and steering them based on researchers’ wants. This exact, bunch-by-bunch management is important for fine-tuning beam properties for FLASH experiments and different radiation remedy research.
“The concept is to make the whole therapy inside one millisecond,” says Stephan. “However after all, it’s a must to [trust] that inside this millisecond, all the things works wonderful. There’s not an opportunity to cease [during] this millisecond. It has to work.”
Regulating the dose stays one of many largest technical hurdles in FLASH. The ionization chambers utilized in commonplace radiotherapy can’t reply precisely when dose charges spike a whole bunch of instances greater in a matter of microseconds. So researchers are growing new detector methods to exactly measure these bursts and preserve tempo with the acute pace of FLASH supply.
FLASH as a Analysis Software
Past its therapeutic potential, FLASH may additionally open new home windows to light up most cancers biology. “What is de facto, actually superinteresting, for my part,” says Vozenin, “is that we are able to use FLASH as a software to grasp the distinction between regular tissue and tumors. There have to be one thing we’re not conscious of that basically distinguishes the 2—and FLASH will help us discover it.” Figuring out these variations, she says, may result in solely new interventions, not simply with radiation, but in addition with medication.
Vozenin’s crew is at the moment testing a speculation involving long-lived proteins current in wholesome tissue however absent in tumors. If these proteins show to be key, she says, “we’re going to discover a solution to manipulate them—and maybe reverse the phenomenon, even [turn] a tumor again into a standard tissue.”
Proponents of FLASH consider it may assist shut the most cancers care hole worldwide; in low-income international locations, solely about 10 p.c of sufferers have entry to radiotherapy, and in middle-income international locations, solely about 60 p.c of sufferers do, based on the Worldwide Atomic Power Company. As a result of FLASH therapy can usually be delivered in a single temporary session, it may spare sufferers from touring lengthy distances for weeks of therapy and permit clinics to deal with many extra individuals.
Excessive-income international locations stand to learn as properly. Fewer periods imply decrease prices, much less pressure on radiotherapy amenities, and fewer uncomfortable side effects and disruptions for sufferers.
The large query now could be, How lengthy will it take? Researchers I spoke with estimate that FLASH may grow to be a routine scientific possibility in about 10 years—after the completion of remaining preclinical research and multiphase human trials, and as machines grow to be extra compact, inexpensive, and environment friendly. A lot of the momentum comes from a rising area of startups competing to construct units, however the broader scientific group stays remarkably open and collaborative.
“Everybody has a relative who is aware of about most cancers due to their very own expertise,” says Stephan. “My mom died of it. Ultimately, we wish to do one thing good for mankind. That’s why individuals work collectively.”
This text seems within the March 2026 print subject.
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