| Literature DB >> 23565507 |
Steve Braunstein1, Jean L Nakamura.
Abstract
One of the most significant effects of radiation therapy on normal tissues is mutagenesis, which is the basis for radiation-induced malignancies. Radiation-induced malignancies are late complications arising after radiotherapy, increasing in frequency among survivors of both pediatric and adult cancers. Genetic backgrounds harboring germline mutations in tumor suppressor genes are recognized risk factors. Some success has been found with using genome wide association studies to identify germline polymorphisms associated with susceptibility. The insights generated by genetics, epidemiology, and the development of experimental models are defining potential strategies to offer to individuals at risk for radiation-induced malignancies. Concurrent technological efforts are developing novel radiotherapy delivery to reduce irradiation of normal tissues, and thereby, to mitigate the risk of radiation-induced malignancies. The goal of this review is to discuss epidemiologic, modeling, and radiotherapy delivery data, where these lines of research intersect and their potential impact on patient care.Entities:
Keywords: cancer survivorship; complications; mutations; radiation-induced tumors; second malignant neoplasms
Year: 2013 PMID: 23565507 PMCID: PMC3615242 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2013.00073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Recent reports of secondary malignant neoplasms (SMNs) in select cancer populations.
| Reference | Primary malignancy | Number of patients (# rec’d RT) | Age at primary diagnosis | Years of follow up | Latency to SMN development | Cumulative incidence of SMNs | Predominant RT-related SMNs | Risk factors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rizzo et al. ( | Leukemia | 29,000 (20,152) | Median 27 years | Median <5 years | Median >15 years | 3.3% at 20 years | CNS thyroid breast | Irradiation, particularly irradiation at ages <10 years associated with 55-fold increase in risk |
| Taylor et al. ( | Mixed: leukemia, CNS tumor | 17,980 (9,223) | Median <10 years | >5 years | Mean 20.5 years | 3.6% at 40 years | Meningiomas gliomas | Radiation dose, intrathecal methotrexate |
| Armstrong et al. ( | CNS tumors | 2,821 (1,569) | Median <10 years | Median 19.6 years | Median >15 years | 7.1% at 25 years | CNS thyroid STS | RT dose >50 Gy assoc with 7.1% SMN risk at 25 years |
| Friedman et al. ( | Mixed histologies | 14,359 (8,536) | Mean 78 years | Mean 25.5 years | Mean 19 years | 20.5% at 30 years | Breast thyroid CNS | SMN risk greatest for Hodgkin’s Disease survivors |
| Laverdiere et al. ( | Neuroblastoma | 954 (400) | Median <10 years | Median <20 years | Median at >20 years | 7% at 30 years | Thyroid renal STS | Radiation and etoposide exsoure |
| Breslow et al. ( | Wilm’s tumor | 13,351 (n/a) | Mean 3.6 years | Mean 11.6 years | Median at >20 years | 6.7% at 25 years | Gastrointestinal breast leukemia | Radiation |
| Meadows et al. ( | Mixed histologies | 14,363 (8,412) | Mean 8.3 years | Median >5 years | Median >20 years | 9.3% at 30 years | Breast thyroid CNS | 0.33 ERR/Gy for glioma; 1.06 ERR/Gy for meningioma; 1.3 ERR/Gy for thyroid ca up to 6 Gy |
| Guibout et al. ( | Mixed histologies | 1,814 (1,258) | Mean 6 years | Median 16 years | Median >20 years | 2.8% at 30 years | Breast | 0.13 ERR/Gy |
| Zelefsky et al. ( | Prostate | 1,310 (1,310) | Median >65 years | Median >84 months | Median >5 years | 13% at 7 years | Colorectal bladder | Increased age; EBRT vs. BT for skin cancers |
| Brown et al. ( | Endometrial | 69,739 (25,106) | Mean 62 years | Median 11.2 years | Median 9.8 years | 26.2% at 30 years | Colorectal bladder hematologic | Radiation increased risk of colon, bladder, rectal cancers |
| Chaturvedi et al. ( | Cervical | 104,760 (52,613) | Mean 50 years | Mean 12.2 years | Median >9 years | 15% at 30 years | Colorectal bladder genital | Radiation; age <50 years at primary diagnosis |
ERR, excess relative risk; RT, radiotherapy; EBRT, external beam radiotherapy; BT, brachytherapy; Gy, gray; STS, soft tissue sarcoma.
Figure 1Schematic of secondary malignant neoplasm (SMN) development.