| Literature DB >> 24694640 |
Gert De Meerleer1, Vincent Khoo2, Bernard Escudier3, Steven Joniau4, Alberto Bossi5, Piet Ost6, Alberto Briganti7, Valérie Fonteyne6, Marco Van Vulpen8, Nicolaas Lumen9, Martin Spahn10, Marc Mareel6.
Abstract
Renal-cell carcinoma is considered to be a radioresistant tumour, but this notion might be wrong. If given in a few (even single) fractions, but at a high fraction dose, stereotactic body radiotherapy becomes increasingly important in the management of renal-cell carcinoma, both in primary settings and in treatment of oligometastatic disease. There is an established biological rationale for the radiosensitivity of renal-cell carcinoma to stereotactic body radiotherapy based on the ceramide pathway, which is activated only when a high dose per fraction is given. Apart from the direct effect of stereotactic body radiotherapy on renal-cell carcinoma, stereotactic body radiotherapy can also induce an abscopal effect. This effect, caused by immunological processes, might be enhanced when targeted drugs and stereotactic body radiotherapy are combined. Therefore, rigorous, prospective randomised trials involving a multidisciplinary scientific panel are needed urgently.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24694640 DOI: 10.1016/S1470-2045(13)70569-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet Oncol ISSN: 1470-2045 Impact factor: 41.316