| Literature DB >> 20679739 |
Nobuyuki Hamada1, Tatsuhiko Imaoka, Shin-ichiro Masunaga, Toshiyuki Ogata, Ryuichi Okayasu, Akihisa Takahashi, Takamitsu A Kato, Yasuhiko Kobayashi, Takeo Ohnishi, Koji Ono, Yoshiya Shimada, Teruki Teshima.
Abstract
Superb biological effectiveness and dose conformity represent a rationale for heavy-ion therapy, which has thus far achieved good cancer controllability while sparing critical normal organs. Immediately after irradiation, heavy ions produce dense ionization along their trajectories, cause irreparable clustered DNA damage, and alter cellular ultrastructure. These ions, as a consequence, inactivate cells more effectively with less cell-cycle and oxygen dependence than conventional photons. The modes of heavy ion-induced cell death/inactivation include apoptosis, necrosis, autophagy, premature senescence, accelerated differentiation, delayed reproductive death of progeny cells, and bystander cell death. This paper briefly reviews the current knowledge of the biological aspects of heavy-ion therapy, with emphasis on the authors' recent findings. The topics include (i) repair mechanisms of heavy ion-induced DNA damage, (ii) superior effects of heavy ions on radioresistant tumor cells (intratumor quiescent cell population, TP53-mutated and BCL2-overexpressing tumors), (iii) novel capacity of heavy ions in suppressing cancer metastasis and neoangiogenesis, and (iv) potential of heavy ions to induce secondary (especially breast) cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20679739 DOI: 10.1269/jrr.09137
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Radiat Res ISSN: 0449-3060 Impact factor: 2.724