| Literature DB >> 23955042 |
Clement Ricard1, Manuel Fernandez, Herwig Requardt, Didier Wion, Jean Claude Vial, Christoph Segebarth, Boudewijn van der Sanden.
Abstract
Among brain tumors, glioblastoma multiforme appears as one of the most aggressive forms of cancer with poor prognosis and no curative treatment available. Recently, a new kind of radio-chemotherapy has been developed using synchrotron irradiation for the photoactivation of molecules with high-Z elements such as cisplatin (PAT-Plat). This protocol showed a cure of 33% of rats bearing the F98 glioma but the efficiency of the treatment was only measured in terms of overall survival. Here, characterization of the effects of the PAT-Plat on tumor volume and tumor blood perfusion are proposed. Changes in these parameters may predict the overall survival. Firstly, changes in tumor growth of the F98 glioma implanted in the hindlimb of nude mice after the PAT-Plat treatment and its different modalities have been characterized. Secondly, the effects of the treatment on tumor blood perfusion have been observed by intravital two-photon microscopy. Cisplatin alone had no detectable effect on the tumor volume. A reduction of tumor growth was measured after a 15 Gy synchrotron irradiation, but the whole therapy (15 Gy irradiation + cisplatin) showed the largest decrease in tumor growth, indicating a synergistic effect of both synchrotron irradiation and cisplatin treatment. A high number of unperfused vessels (52%) were observed in the peritumoral area in comparison with untreated controls. In the PAT-Plat protocol the transient tumor growth reduction may be due to synergistic interactions of tumor-cell-killing effects and reduction of the tumor blood perfusion.Entities:
Keywords: cisplatin; glioma; synchrotron photoactivation therapy; synergistic effects; two-photon microscopy
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23955042 PMCID: PMC3943558 DOI: 10.1107/S0909049513016567
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Synchrotron Radiat ISSN: 0909-0495 Impact factor: 2.616
Animals (n = 146) were randomized in eight groups depending on their tumor volume at the beginning of the therapy and the type of treatment
| Experiment | Group | Type of treatment | Number of mice |
|---|---|---|---|
| Large volume (mean tumor volume: 480 mm3) | 1 | Control | 14 |
| 2 | 2.5 µg Cisplatin | 7 | |
| 3 | Irradiation | 13 | |
| 4 | Whole treatment | 27 | |
| Small volume (mean tumor volume: 106 mm3) | 5 | Control | 6 + 6 implanted with F98-GFP cells |
| 6 | 2.5 µg Cisplatin | 7 + 3 implanted with F98-GFP cells | |
| 7 | Irradiation | 5 + 3 implanted with F98-GFP cells | |
| 8 | Whole treatment | 18 + 6 implanted with F98-GFP cells | |
| 5 µg Cisplatin | (Control, 5 µg cisplatin, irradiation, whole treatment) | 31 | |
Figure 1Irradiation set-up. Schematic representation of the positioning of the mouse in the horizontal frame with the left hindlimb maintained in a vertical plexiglas tube.
Figure 2Effects of the treatment on tumor vasculature. (a) Macrophotography of the surface of the F98 glioma implanted in the hindlimb of a mouse after the removal of the skin. (b) Immunohistochemistry performed on a section in the middle of a F98 glioma. Green: immunolabelling of the collagen IV indicating the basal lamina of the vasculature in the peritumoral area; blue: cell nuclei stained with Hoechst 33342. Note the necrotic core at the center of the tumor. (c) Two-photon imaging of an untreated F98-GFP glioma at day 5 after the beginning of the study. Green: GFP-F98 glioma cells; red: rhodamineB-dextran 70 kDa dye staining of blood vessels. Only the tumor periphery is perfused until a maximum depth of approximately 100 µm. All two-photon images, (c)–(f), were taken at a depth of 50 µm beneath the surface of the tumor. (d) Two-photon imaging of a F98-GFP glioma at day 5 after receiving 15 Gy 79 keV tomographic synchrotron irradiation. Green: GFP-F98 glioma cells; red: rhodamineB-dextran 70 kDa dye staining the blood vessels. The tumor periphery is still perfused. The solid tumor mass decreased; see the empty space between functional red vessels and the green tumor cells. In comparison with the control tumors (c), cell morphology has changed from elongated shapes into round shapes. (e) Two-photon imaging of an untreated F98 glioma at day 5 after the beginning of the study. Green: vasculature labeled by FITC-dextran 70 kDa; red: sulforhodamineB dye extravascated in the extravascular extracellular tumor volume in order to obtain a better contrast. A rolling-ball background subtraction with a radius of ten pixels was applied (with this method, a local background value is determined for every pixel by averaging over a very large ball around the pixel; this value is then subtracted from the original image, removing variations of the background intensities). Note that for the staining of the functional vessels, FITC-dextran (green signal) instead of rhodaminB-dextran (red signal) is used. (f) Two-photon imaging of a F98 glioma at day 5 after the whole treatment. Note that the non-perfused vessels areas appear dark (see white arrows) and a few functional vessels show up green after perfusion with FITC-dextran surrounded by a red SRB staining of the whole extravascular volume. A rolling-ball background subtraction with a radius of ten pixels was applied. (g) Unperfused vascular surface (%) in control (group 1) and PAT-Plat (group 4) animals at five days post-treatment. (h) Tumor growth in control (group 1; red squares) and PAT-Plat (group 4; green diamonds) animals during the first three weeks post-treatment. The decrease of the perfused vascular surface observed in PAT-Plat animals (g) can be correlated with the reduction of the tumor growth.
Figure 3(a) Effects of the therapy on tumor growth for animals bearing a large tumor (mean volume 480 ± 33 mm3) at the moment of the treatment. Effects of the intratumoral injection of 2.5 µg of cisplatin alone (group 2; black down-triangles), the radiotherapy alone (group 3; blue up-triangles), the whole treatment with 2.5 µg of cisplatin (group 4; green diamonds) and no treatment (group 1; red squares) on the tumor growth. (b) Effects of the therapy on tumor growth for animals bearing a small tumor (mean volume 106 ± 11 mm3) at the moment of the treatment. Effects of the intratumoral injection of 2.5 µg of cisplatin alone (group 6; black down-triangles), the radiotherapy alone (group 7; blue up-triangles), the whole treatment with 2.5 µg of cisplatin (group 8; green diamonds) and no treatment (group 5; red squares) on the tumor growth. For each group the tumor volume was normalized to 100 at the moment of the treatment. &: p < 0.05 whole treatment versus control; #: p < 0.05 irradiation alone versus control; +: p < 0.05 whole treatment versus cisplatin alone; £: p < 0.05 irradiation alone versus cisplatin alone; $: p < 0.05 whole treatment versus irradiation alone; μ: p < 0.05 cisplatin alone versus control; unpaired two-tailed Student’s t-test.
Figure 4A hypothetical model explaining the effects of the PAT-Plat protocol. (a) General model for PAT-Plat effects. Irradiation leads to cellular damages such as DNA SSB and DSB directly or indirectly via the creation of reactive oxygen species. These damages are less likely repaired thanks to the inhibition of certain repair pathways by the cisplatin. Moreover, the PAT-Plat reduces the perfused vascular surface. This reduction of the perfusion can indirectly induce tumor cell death. (b) Schematic representation of the regression observed on a F98 glioma one month after the treatment. Grey area: part of the tumor that has disappeared after the whole treatment. The black arrow indicates the tumor volume reduction. (c) Macrophotograph of a F98 glioma one month after the whole treatment. Note that the dark spots show the blood vessel coagulations after the whole PAT-Plat treatment (white arrows).