| Literature DB >> 24324970 |
Jing Zeng1, Timothy J Harris, Michael Lim, Charles G Drake, Phuoc T Tran.
Abstract
New and innovative treatment strategies for cancer patients in the fields of immunotherapy and radiotherapy are rapidly developing in parallel. Among the most promising preclinical treatment approaches is combining immunotherapy with radiotherapy where early data suggest synergistic effects in several tumor model systems. These studies demonstrate that radiation combined with immunotherapy can result in superior efficacy for local tumor control. More alluring is the emergence of data suggesting an equally profound systemic response also known as "abscopal" effects with the combination of radiation and certain immunotherapies. Studies addressing optimal radiation dose, fractionation, and modality to be used in combination with immunotherapy still require further exploration. However, recent anecdotal clinical reports combining stereotactic or hypofractionated radiation regimens with immunotherapy have resulted in dramatic sustained clinical responses, both local and abscopal. Technologic advances in clinical radiation therapy has made it possible to deliver hypofractionated regimens anywhere in the body using stereotactic radiation techniques, facilitating further clinical investigations. Thus, stereotactic radiation in combination with immunotherapy agents represents an exciting and potentially fruitful new space for improving cancer therapeutic responses.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24324970 PMCID: PMC3845488 DOI: 10.1155/2013/658126
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Stereotactic radiosurgery versus conventional radiation. Left three images depict stereotactic radiosurgery for a lung tumor: (a) shows a patient's transverse CT image through the lung tumor (red = tumor outline, purple = everything inside the line is receiving at least 100% of the full prescribed radiation dose, yellow = everything inside the line is receiving at least 60% of the full prescribed radiation dose, and green = everything inside the line is receiving at least 30% of the full prescribed radiation dose); (c) shows the same patient in coronal CT view; and (e) shows the 11 beams of radiation centered on the tumor, to generate a radiation plan that is highly focused on the tumor. Right three images depict a more traditional radiation plan for a lung tumor (colored lines defined same as images on the left): (b) shows a patient's transverse CT image through the lung tumor; (d) shows the same patient in coronal CT view; and (f) shows the 2 beams of radiation centered on the tumor. In comparison to conventional radiation, stereotactic radiosurgery is able to focus the high and medium radiation dose regions around the tumor while sparing normal tissues and organs.
Figure 2Proton radiation dose distribution. Patient with a tumor in the pituitary gland, receiving proton radiation to the tumor (innermost cyan shaded area). Upper three images show the radiation dose distribution from a photon radiation treatment plan using multiple converging beams on axial CT image (left upper), sagittal CT image (middle upper), and coronal CT image (right upper). Lower three images show the radiation dose distribution from a proton radiation treatment plan using three proton beams on axial CT image (left lower), sagittal CT image (middle lower), and coronal CT image (right lower). For all images, innermost red line = everything inside the line is receiving at least 100% of the full prescribed radiation dose, and outermost blue line = everything inside the line is receiving at least 20% of the full prescribed radiation dose. Note that the high radiation dose region (inside the red line) looks similar between the photon and proton plan, but the lower radiation dose region (inside the blue line) is much smaller with proton radiation than photon radiation.