| Literature DB >> 17603905 |
Carsten Nieder1, Nicolaus Andratschke, Sabrina T Astner.
Abstract
Several experimental strategies of radiation-induced central nervous system toxicity prevention have recently resulted in encouraging data. The present review summarizes the background for this research and the treatment results. It extends to the perspectives of tissue regeneration strategies, based for example on stem and progenitor cells. Preliminary data suggest a scenario with individually tailored strategies where patients with certain types of comorbidity, resulting in impaired regeneration reserve capacity, might be considered for toxicity prevention, while others might be "salvaged" by delayed interventions that circumvent the problem of normal tissue specificity. Given the complexity of radiation-induced changes, single target interventions might not suffice. Future interventions might vary with patient age, elapsed time from radiotherapy and toxicity type. Potential components include several drugs that interact with neurodegeneration, cell transplantation (into the CNS itself, the blood stream, or both) and creation of reparative signals and a permissive microenvironment, e.g., for cell homing. Without manipulation of the stem cell niche either by cell transfection or addition of appropriate chemokines and growth factors and by providing normal perfusion of the affected region, durable success of such cell-based approaches is hard to imagine.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17603905 PMCID: PMC1933540 DOI: 10.1186/1748-717X-2-23
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1748-717X Impact factor: 3.481
Figure 1Schematic concept of the time course of radiation-induced reactions in cancer patients treated with ionizing radiation via portals exposing some part of the central nervous system (CNS). The tumor is expected to become eradicated within a few weeks. The severity and latency of CNS reactions are dose-dependent. Three different levels are shown. Acute CNS reactions often remain below the level of clinical detection and resolve early. A second wave of so-called late reactions might develop after several months or years and after higher radiation doses. The upper curve with or without additional comorbidity shows how certain factors might influence damage progression or make intervention more difficult. The dotted line below the threshold level represents succesful therapeutic intervention, which was started at the time indicated by the arrow.
Overview of experimental studies of central nervous system (CNS) radioprotection
| Reference | Animals | CNS region | RT schedule | AF schedule | Follow-up | Results |
| Guelman et al. [88] | Neonatal Wistar rats | Cephalic end | 1 × 5 Gy | Subcutaneously 100 mg/kg | 30 days (90 days for 1 endpoint) | Sign. protection |
| Alaoui et al. [89] | Young Sprague-Dawley rats | Whole body (brain) | 1 × 2.5 Gy | Intraperitoneal 75 mg/kg | 6 hours | No sign. protection |
| Lamproglou et al. [90] | Young Wistar rats | Whole brain | 10 × 3 Gy | Intraperitoneal 37.5, 75 and 150 mg/kg | 7.5 months | 37.5 mg/kg not effective; 150 mg/kg caused 34% mortality; 75 mg/kg reduced memory dysfunction |
| Plotnikova et al. [91, 92] | Adult Wistar rats | Whole brain | 1 × 25 Gy (earlier study with 40 or 60 Gy) | Intraperitoneal 300 mg/kg | 18 months | Protection against vascular damage, necrosis and death after 25 Gy only |
| Spence et al. [93] | Adult F-344 rats | Spinal cord | 1 × 20–38 Gy | Intrathecal 0.33 mg | 36 weeks | Protection with DMF 1.3 |
| Nieder et al. [94] | Adult F344 rats | Spinal cord | 2 fractions, high dose | Intrathecal 0.3 mg | 12 months | No sign. protection |
| Nieder et al. [94] | Adult F344 rats | Spinal cord | 2 fractions, high dose | Subcutaneous 200 mg/kg | 12 months | Protection at 36 Gy-level |
| Nieder et al. [43] | Adult F344 rats | Spinal cord | Single fraction, high dose | Intrathecal 0.3 mg plus s.c. IGF-1 | 12 months | Protection with DMF 1.07 |
| Andratschke et al. [44] | Adult F344 rats | Spinal cord | 2 fractions, high dose | Intrathecal PDGF as sole treatment | 12 months | Protection with DMF 1.05 |
RT: radiotherapy; AF: amifostine; IGF-1: insulin-like growth factor-1; PDGF: platelet-derived growth factor; DMF: dose modification factor
Figure 2Growth factors influence several steps of neurogenesis. NSC: neural stem cell, NPC: neural progenitor cell, GPC: glial progenitor cell, FGF-2: basic fibroblast growth factor, EGF: epidermal growth factor, CNTF: ciliary neurotrophic factor, EPO: erythropoietin, PDGF: platelet-derived growth factor, IGF-1: insulin-like growth factor-1, BMP-2: bone morphogenetic protein-2, BDNF: brain-derived neurotrophic factor, T3: thyroid hormone