Literature DB >> 11772430

Response of rat intracranial 9L gliosarcoma to microbeam radiation therapy.

F Avraham Dilmanian1, Terry M Button, Géraldine Le Duc, Nan Zhong, Louis A Peña, Jennifer A L Smith, Steve R Martinez, Tigran Bacarian, Jennifer Tammam, Baorui Ren, Peter M Farmer, John Kalef-Ezra, Peggy L Micca, Marta M Nawrocky, James A Niederer, F Peter Recksiek, Alexander Fuchs, Eliot M Rosen.   

Abstract

Radiotherapeutic doses for malignant gliomas are generally palliative because greater, supposedly curative doses would impart clinically unacceptable damage to nearby vital CNS tissues. To improve radiation treatment for human gliomas, we evaluated microbeam radiation therapy, which utilizes an array of parallel, microscopically thin (<100 microm) planar beams (microbeams) of synchrotron-generated X rays. Rats with i.c. 9L gliosarcoma tumors were exposed laterally to a single microbeam, 27 pm wide and 3.8 mm high, stepwise, to produce irradiation arrays with 50, 75, or 100 microm of on-center beam spacings and 150, 250, 300, or 500 Gy of in-slice, skin-entrance, single-exposure doses. The resulting array size was 9 mm wide and 10.4 mm high (using three 3.8-mm vertical tiers); the beam's median energy was -70 keV. When all data were collated, the median survival was 70 days; no depletion of nerve cells was observed. However, when data from the highest skin-entrance dose and/or the smallest microbeam spacings were excluded, the median survival time of the subset of rats was 170 days, and no white matter necrosis was observed. Others have reported unilateral single-exposure broad-beam irradiation of i.c. 9L gliosarcomas at 22.5 Gy with a median survival of only -34 days and with severe depletion of neurons. These results suggest that the therapeutic index of unidirectional microbeams is larger than that of the broad beams and that an application for microbeam radiation therapy in treating certain malignant brain tumors may be found in the future.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11772430      PMCID: PMC1920629          DOI: 10.1093/neuonc/4.1.26

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuro Oncol        ISSN: 1522-8517            Impact factor:   12.300


  55 in total

1.  X-ray microbeams: Tumor therapy and central nervous system research.

Authors:  F A Dilmanian; Y Qu; S Liu; C D Cool; J Gilbert; J F Hainfeld; C A Kruse; J Laterra; D Lenihan; M M Nawrocky; G Pappas; C-I Sze; T Yuasa; N Zhong; Z Zhong; J W McDonald
Journal:  Nucl Instrum Methods Phys Res A       Date:  2005-08-11       Impact factor: 1.455

2.  Double-strand breaks on F98 glioma rat cells induced by minibeam and broad-beam synchrotron radiation therapy.

Authors:  S Gil; Y Prezado; M Sabés
Journal:  Clin Transl Oncol       Date:  2013-11-23       Impact factor: 3.405

Review 3.  Novel treatment planning approaches to enhance the therapeutic ratio: targeting the molecular mechanisms of radiation therapy.

Authors:  M Protopapa; V Kouloulias; A Kougioumtzopoulou; Z Liakouli; C Papadimitriou; A Zygogianni
Journal:  Clin Transl Oncol       Date:  2019-06-28       Impact factor: 3.405

Review 4.  Spatially fractionated proton minibeams.

Authors:  Juergen Meyer; John Eley; Thomas E Schmid; Stephanie E Combs; Remi Dendale; Yolanda Prezado
Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2018-11-07       Impact factor: 3.039

5.  Pilot study for compact microbeam radiation therapy using a carbon nanotube field emission micro-CT scanner.

Authors:  Mike Hadsell; Guohua Cao; Jian Zhang; Laurel Burk; Torsten Schreiber; Eric Schreiber; Sha Chang; Jianping Lu; Otto Zhou
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2014-06       Impact factor: 4.071

6.  Microbeam radiation therapy alters vascular architecture and tumor oxygenation and is enhanced by a galectin-1 targeted anti-angiogenic peptide.

Authors:  Robert J Griffin; Nathan A Koonce; Ruud P M Dings; Eric Siegel; Eduardo G Moros; Elke Bräuer-Krisch; Peter M Corry
Journal:  Radiat Res       Date:  2012-05-18       Impact factor: 2.841

7.  Physiologically gated micro-beam radiation therapy using electronically controlled field emission x-ray source array.

Authors:  Pavel Chtcheprov; Michael Hadsell; Laurel Burk; Rachel Ger; Lei Zhang; Hong Yuan; Yueh Z Lee; Sha Chang; Jianping Lu; Otto Zhou
Journal:  Proc SPIE Int Soc Opt Eng       Date:  2013-03-15

8.  Image-guided microbeam irradiation to brain tumour bearing mice using a carbon nanotube x-ray source array.

Authors:  Lei Zhang; Hong Yuan; Laurel M Burk; Christy R Inscoe; Michael J Hadsell; Pavel Chtcheprov; Yueh Z Lee; Jianping Lu; Sha Chang; Otto Zhou
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2014-02-20       Impact factor: 3.609

9.  High-precision radiosurgical dose delivery by interlaced microbeam arrays of high-flux low-energy synchrotron X-rays.

Authors:  Raphaël Serduc; Elke Bräuer-Krisch; Erik A Siegbahn; Audrey Bouchet; Benoit Pouyatos; Romain Carron; Nicolas Pannetier; Luc Renaud; Gilles Berruyer; Christian Nemoz; Thierry Brochard; Chantal Rémy; Emmanuel L Barbier; Alberto Bravin; Géraldine Le Duc; Antoine Depaulis; François Estève; Jean A Laissue
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-02-03       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Treating Brain Tumor with Microbeam Radiation Generated by a Compact Carbon-Nanotube-Based Irradiator: Initial Radiation Efficacy Study.

Authors:  Hong Yuan; Lei Zhang; Jonathan E Frank; Christina R Inscoe; Laurel M Burk; Mike Hadsell; Yueh Z Lee; Jianping Lu; Sha Chang; Otto Zhou
Journal:  Radiat Res       Date:  2015-08-25       Impact factor: 2.841

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