I should have forwarded it to you, Jean-Luc.
As part of my program, I operate the cyclotron at McMaster University Medical Centre. They are expensive to operate. A dose of fluorodeoxyglucose, if we were operating at full capacity and therefore using the system to its fullest availability, would probably be in the range of about $250 to $300. It actually now costs us about $600 to produce a dose, as compared to something like, I believe, $15 to $20 for a dose of a technetium-based product, although it can sometimes be up to $50 for a technetium-based product. Sodium fluoride will be less expensive because it doesn't have the complex chemistry associated with it. It would probably also be in the range of about $175 to $250 a dose, so it is also a much more expensive product.