| Literature DB >> 30405188 |
Yolanda Prezado1, Gregory Jouvion2, Annalisa Patriarca3, Catherine Nauraye3, Consuelo Guardiola4, Marjorie Juchaux4, Charlotte Lamirault4, Dalila Labiod5,6, Laurene Jourdain7, Catherine Sebrie7, Remi Dendale3, Wilfredo Gonzalez4, Frederic Pouzoulet5,6.
Abstract
Proton minibeam radiation therapy (pMBRT) is a novel strategy which has already shown a remarkable reduction in neurotoxicity as to compared with standard proton therapy. Here we report on the first evaluation of tumor control effectiveness in glioma bearing rats with highly spatially modulated proton beams. Whole brains (excluding the olfactory bulb) of Fischer 344 rats were irradiated. Four groups of animals were considered: a control group (RG2 tumor bearing rats), a second group of RG2 tumor-bearing rats and a third group of normal rats that received pMBRT (70 Gy peak dose in one fraction) with very heterogeneous dose distributions, and a control group of normal rats. The tumor-bearing and normal animals were followed-up for 6 months and one year, respectively. pMBRT leads to a significant tumor control and tumor eradication in 22% of the cases. No substantial brain damage which confirms the widening of the therapeutic window for high-grade gliomas offered by pMBRT. Additionally, the fact that large areas of the brain can be irradiated with pMBRT without significant side effects, would allow facing the infiltrative nature of gliomas.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30405188 PMCID: PMC6220274 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-34796-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
BLI values for the rats included in the study.
| Rat | BLI signal after background subtraction (p/s) | Group |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2,6 × 107 | control |
| 2 | 6,9 × 106 | control |
| 3 | 9,6 × 106 | control |
| 4 | 5,7 × 107 | control |
| 5 | 1,2 × 108 | control |
| 6 | 9,7 × 106 | control |
| 7 | 1,8 × 105 | control |
| 8 | 7,3 × 107 | Irradiated |
| 9 | 4,9 × 106 | Irradiated |
| 10 | 5,0 × 107 | Irradiated |
| 11 | 4,5 × 107 | Irradiated |
| 12 | 2,5 × 107 | Irradiated |
| 13 | 3,7 × 107 | Irradiated |
| 14 | 1,5 × 107 | Irradiated |
| 15 | 9,5 × 107 | Irradiated |
| 16 | 8,6 × 107 | Irradiated |
Figure 1Dosimetry. Left: 2D dose map in the rat head (coronal view). The red line marks the approximate position of the center of the tumor. Right: Corresponding lateral dose profile at the tumor position.
Study groups and follow-up.
| Study groups | Sacrificed | MRI | Histology |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tumor bearing- rats, non-irradiated controls (n = 7) | When endpoints reached | No | All |
| Tumor bearing- rats, pMBRT (n = 9) | When endpoints reached or at the end of the study (6 months) | 10 days after irradiation (n = 5) | All |
| Normal rats, pMBRT (n = 9) | If endpoints reached or at the end of study: | 6 months (n = 5) | All |
| Normal rats, controls (n = 4) | At the end of study | No | All |
Figure 2Survival curves for the controls (n = 7) versus pMBRT irradiated tumor-bearing rats (n = 9). pMBRT significantly increases tumor control. Additionally, a 22% of long-term survivals were obtained.
Figure 3MRI evaluation at short-term. MRI images of two irradiated tumour-bearing rats taken 10 days after treatment. Upper row: T2w images. Lower row: T1w images 8 min after Gd injection. A large tumour in the right hemisphere is testified by a mass deforming the brain structures in T2w and a large area of blood barrier breakdown in T1w.
Figure 4Histology. pMBRT irradiation protocol: strong impact on glioma but low impact on the normal brain tissue. (A–D) Without irradiation, rats displayed large gliomas (A), sometimes with peripheral necrosis (A and B, Δ) and proliferation/activation of microglial cells (thickening and shortening of their cell processes) in the tumor as well as at the periphery (C). In the necrotic areas, activation of astrocytes (proliferation and hypertrophy of cell body and processes: astrogliosis) was detected (D). (E–H) After pMBRT, for rats who had to be sacrificed at an early stage (less than 3 months), multifocal necrotic foci could be detected in the tumor (E–G, star) and brain tissue at the periphery, associated with a proliferation/hyperplasia of microglial cells (G) and astrocytes (H). (I–L) Long-term consequences of pMBRT were minimal on the brain tissue. Almost no lesion was indeed detected (in HE: I,J), except rare activated microglial cells (K, arrowheads), and astrocytes (L; left panel normal, right panel cluster of activated astrocytes). (M–P) 6 Months after irradiation, almost no lesion was detected in irradiated normal rats (M,N) except rare foci of microglial cell (O, arrowheads) and astrocyte (P; left panel normal, right panel cluster of activated astrocytes) activation. (Q–T) 12 Months after irradiation, the profile was similar as after 6 months, i.e. almost no lesion (Q) except moderate microglial cell hyperplasia (S) or foci of activation, associated with focal calcifications (R, arrow) in 2 rats. No astrogliosis was detected (T). (U–X) Control rats (no irradiation and no tumor) did not display any histological lesion (only one rat displayed small, randomly distributed calcification foci, data not shown). (A,B,E,F,I,J, M,N,Q,R,U,V) HE staining; (C,G,K,N,R,V) Iba1 immunohistochemistry to assess microglial cell density and morphology; (D,H,L,P,T,X) GFAP immunohistochemistry to assess astrocyte density and morphology.
Figure 5MRI evaluation of long-term survivals. Upper row: T2w (left), T1w before (center) and 8 min after Gd injection (right) images of one of the long-term survivals. No substantial damage was observed with the exception of a scar in the tumor injection site. No tumor presence was observed.
Figure 6MRI evaluation of normal rats. Comparison of the MRI images acquired at 6 months after irradiation for one of the irradiated animals (upper row) versus one of the controls (lower row). T2w images (A,F), RARE-T1w images before (B,G) and after 8 min Gd injection (D,J) and FLASH-T1w images before (C,H) and after (E,I) Gd injection are shown. No tissue damage is observed and no significant difference was found between irradiated and control animals.
Figure 7MRI acquisition of irradiated normal rats after one year of follow up. T2w (left) and T1w-RARE images before (center) and 8 minutes (right) after Gd injection. No substantial lesions are observed.