| Literature DB >> 30871044 |
Valeria Carina1, Viviana Costa1, Maria Sartori2, Daniele Bellavia3, Angela De Luca4, Lavinia Raimondi5, Milena Fini6, Gianluca Giavaresi7.
Abstract
Osteosarcoma (OS) is a primary bone sarcoma, manifesting as osteogenesis by malignant cells. Nowadays, patients' quality of life has been improved, however continuing high rates of limb amputation, pulmonary metastasis and drug toxicity, remain unresolved issues. Thus, effective osteosarcoma therapies are still required. Recently, the potentialities of biophysical treatments in osteosarcoma have been evaluated and seem to offer a promising future, thanks in this field as they are less invasive. Several approaches have been investigated such as hyperthermia (HT), high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU), low intensity pulsed ultrasound (LIPUS) and sono- and photodynamic therapies (SDT, PDT). This review aims to summarize in vitro and in vivo studies and clinical trials employing biophysical stimuli in osteosarcoma treatment. The findings underscore how the technological development of biophysical therapies might represent an adjuvant role and, in some cases, alternative role to the surgery, radio and chemotherapy treatment of OS. Among them, the most promising are HIFU and HT, which are already employed in OS patient treatment, while LIPUS/SDT and PDT seem to be particularly interesting for their low toxicity.Entities:
Keywords: adjuvant therapies; biophysical stimuli; osteosarcoma
Year: 2019 PMID: 30871044 PMCID: PMC6468347 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11030348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1OS genesis (A). Genetic alterations in germline or sporadic mutation in osteoblasts interfere with the osteogenic process, resulting in an alterate balance between proliferation and differentiation, that cause an uncontrolled cell proliferation. Standard OS treatment Flow Chart (B) according to the NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology Version I.2018.
Figure 2Physical principles of adjuvant biophysical stimuli. HT treatment (A): The use of different type of HT source alone (alternating magnetic field (AMF) or radiofrequency (RF) or laser) causes a temperature increase reaching the maximum on the body surface that decreases while moving away from the source (Left Panel). The combined use with nanoparticles is able to concentrate the heat into target cells without heating the surrounding tissues (Right Panel). HIFU treatment (B): Thermal effect: the mechanical energy is converted into heat reaching the maximum temperature on tumor by focusing the US in a site-specific manner (Left Panel). Mechanical effect: focused ultrasound causes inertial cavitation, bubble explosion and ROS formation (Right Panel). LIPUS and SDT Treatment (C): LIPUS brings microstreaming improving membrane permeability and drugs uptake, moreover, in combination with sonosensitizer, triggers stable cavitation causing ROS generation. PDT treatment (D): The light beam excites photosensitizer electrons that, returning to the basal level, transmit the energy to nearby molecules inducing two type of reaction: (a) generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) into the medium; (b) activation of singlet oxygen (1O2) promoting also ROS production.
Selected preclinical and clinical studies on HT treatment for osteosarcoma.
| Study | Cell/Animal Models Patients | Treatment | Mechanisms/Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| In vitro | HOS85, MG-63 Saos2 | HT 42 °C | Cell viability reduction HSP70-dependent alkaline phosphatase activity-dependent | Trieb et al., 2007 [ |
| HuO9 | HT 41 °C | Cell viability reduction Hsp27-dependent, AMF-dependent | Nakajima et al., 2012 [ | |
| U-2 OS | HT 43 °C | ROS; apoptosis ER stress mitochondria, caspase mediated | Hou et al., 2014 [ | |
| MG-63 | HT 42 °C | Cell death at both temperatures. | Moise et al., 2018 [ | |
| MG-63, KHOS, U-2 OS Saos2 | HT 43 °C | Cytotoxicity | Debes et al., 2005 [ | |
| RD- ES (primary Ewing’s sarcoma) | HT 42 °C + Melphalan | Apoptosis Caspase 3 dependent | Krause et al., 2008 [ | |
| HOS | HT 42 °C + β-lapachone | Cytotoxicity NQO1-dependent | Hori et al., 2011 [ | |
| OS732 | HT 43 °C + Paclitaxel+ Etoposide | Apoptosis Fas-dependent | Huang et al., 2012 [ | |
| OS732, MG-63 | HT 43 °C + Paclitaxel+ Cisplatin | Apoptosis Fas-dependent | Huang et al., 2013 [ | |
| LM8 subcutaneous in syngeneic host mouse | HT 45 °C (Alternating Magnetic Field) + MCLs | Cytotoxicity Hsp70 | Shido et al., 2010 [ | |
| Saos2 | HT 41–43 °C (Alternating Magnetic Field) + glass–glass ceramic thermoseeds | Apoptosis | Alcaide et al., 2012 [ | |
| HOS | HT 45 °C (Magnetic field) + magnesium–calcium ferrites nanoparticles | Cytotoxicity | Saldívar-Ramírez et al., 2014 [ | |
| Saos2 | HT 45 °C (Magnetic Field) + ferrite magnetic nanoparticles | Cytotoxicity | Makridis et al., 2016 [ | |
| Saos2 | HT (Magnetic Field) + ferrimagnetic glass–ceramics nanocomposites | Cytotoxicity | Gamal-Eldeen et al., 2017 [ | |
| MG-63 | HT 45 °C (Magnetic field) + Hydroxyapatite Coated Iron Oxide Nanoparticles | Cytotoxicity | Mondal et al., 2017 [ | |
| Saos2 | HT 42 °C (Microwave) + gold nanoparticles and doxorubicin | Cytotoxicity | Ghahremani et al., 2011 [ | |
| U-2 OS (2D and 3D cultures) | HT (laser beam) Folate-targeted gold nanorods | Cytotoxicity | Li Volsi et al., 2017 [ | |
| MG-63 | HT (laser beam) PAA- coated nanorods | Cytotoxicity and apoptosis | Pan et al., 2018 [ | |
| Clinical | Patients | Surgical resection followed by radiation therapy combined with HT | Results: Five months after the surgery, the clinical and instrumental control showed an effective consolidation of the chest wall and good trophism of the flap without recurrence. | Tancredi et al., 2011 [ |
| Patients | HT | Results: Local recurrence and survival comparable with amputation treatment. Function improvement compared with transtibial amputation. | Han et al., 2017 [ | |
| Patients | HT + etoposide, ifosfamide, and doxorubicin | Results: Compared with neoadjuvant | Issels et al., 2010, 2018 [ |
Abbreviation; HIFU High Intensity Focused Ultrasound; US Ultrasound.
Selected clinical studies on HIFU treatment for osteosarcoma.
| Clinical Study | Treatment | Mechanisms/Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patients: 7 | HIFU | Results: Complete response in three patients | Li et al., 2009 [ |
| Patients: 25 patients with malignant bone tumors; 12 with OS | HIFU + chemotherapy | Results: Tumor ablation | Li et al., 2010 [ |
| Patients: Retrospective study on 80 patients with a primary bone malignancy and | US-HIFU + chemotherapy in 62 patients with OS, 1 with periosteal osteosarcoma, and 3 with Ewing sarcoma. | Results: Tumor ablation in 69 patients malignant bone tumors resulted completely ablated and the remaining 11 patients showed greater than 50% tumor ablation | Chen et al., 2010 [ |
| Patients: 22 patients with solid tumors, 1 with OS | US-HIFU | Results: Tumor ablation, pain reduction | Orgera et al., 2011 [ |
| Patients: Retrospective study on 27 patients with local unresectable recurrence of OS previously subjected to multi-agent chemotherapy | HIFU | Results: Tumor ablation; Pain reduction | Yu et al., 2015 [ |
Abbreviation; LIPUS Low Intensity Pulsed Ultrasound, HMME Hematoporphyrin Monomethyl Ether, ALA 5-Aminolevulinic acid, ROS Reactive Oxygen Species.
Selected preclinical studies on LIPUS treatment for osteosarcoma.
| Study | Cell/Animal Models | Treatment | Mechanisms/Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| In vitro/in vivo | In vitro (MG-63 cells) | LIPUS + HMME | Apoptosis Caspase dependent | Liu et al., 2015 [ |
| In vitro (UMR-106 cells) | LIPUS alone | Cytotoxicity ROS and Ca2+ dependent | Tian et al., 2010 [ | |
| In vitro (LM8 cells) | LIPUS | Apoptosis and necrosis | Matsuo et al., 2017 [ | |
| In vitro (UMR-106 cells) | LIPUS + 5-ALA | Apoptosis mitochondrial pathway dependent | Li et al., 2015 [ | |
| In vitro (UMR-106 cells) | LIPUS + 5-ALA | Apoptosis ROS mitochondrial pathway dependent | Li et al., 2015 [ | |
| In vivo (mouse) | LIPUS alone | Apoptosis | Tian et al., 2009 [ |
Abbreviation; LIPUS Low Intensity Pulsed Ultrasound, HMME Hematoporphyrin Monomethyl Ether, ALA 5-Aminolevulinic acid, ROS Reactive Oxygen Species.
Selected preclinical and clinical studies on PDT treatment for osteosarcoma.
| Study | Cell/Animal Models | Treatment | Mechanisms/Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| In vitro | In vitro | AO-PDT | Cytotoxic effect on OS MDR cells | Kusuzaki et al., 2000 [ |
| In vitro | Aminolevulinic acid hexyl ester-PDT (hALA-PDT) | hALA-PDT + HT treatment enhances the reduction of cell viability in cells insensitive to hALA-PDT alone | Yanase et al., 2009 [ | |
| In vitro | mTHPC-PDT | Apoptosis caspases- dependent in metastatic cell line | Reidy et al., 2012 [ | |
| In vitro | Methylene blue-PDT | Apoptosis mitochondrial pathway induced | Guan et al., 2014 [ | |
| In vitro | na-pheophorbide-PDT | Apoptosis mitochondrial and caspase pathways dependent | Nagai et al., 2014 [ | |
| In vitro | NPe6-PDT + LLLT | Cytotoxicity ROS and apoptosis dependent | Tsai et al., 2015 [ | |
| In vitro | ALA-PDT | Cytotoxicity | Li et al., 2016 [ | |
| In vitro | Pyropheophorbide-α methyl ester-PDT | Apoptosis mitochondrial pathway induced | Huang et al., 2016 [ | |
| In vitro | Aloe-emodin-PDT | Autophagy, apoptosis ROS-JNK induced | Tu et al., 2016 [ | |
| In vitro | ALA-PDT | Cytotoxicity | White et al., 2016 [ | |
| In vitro | TiO2 @xGd NBs-PDT | Cytotoxicity ROS induced | Imani et al., 2017 [ | |
| In vitro | PTX-Ce6@Ker-PDT | Increase of cell death both 2D and 3D cell model systems, and in MDR Saos2 cell line | Martella et al., 2018 [ | |
| In vitro | In vitro | Methylene blue-PDT | Apoptosis | Matsubara et al., 2008 [ |
| In vitro | AO-PDT | Cell invasion and pulmonary metastases inhibition | Satonaka et al., 2011 [ | |
| In vitro | BCDP-17-PDT | Apoptosis | Gong et al., 2013 [ | |
| In vitro | HMME-PDT | Apoptosis caspase-dependent | Zeng et al., 2013 [ | |
| In vitro | Hiporfin-PDT | Inhibition of proliferation by G2M arrest, ROS increase, Apoptosis and necrosis | Sun et al., 2015 [ | |
| In vitro | BCDP-18-PDT | Inhibition of proliferation by G2M arrest; | Sun et al., 2016 [ | |
| In vitro | Foscan or Foslip-PDT | Apoptosis | Meier et al., 2017 [ | |
| In vitro | Magnetic calcium silicate/chitosan porous -PDT | Cytotoxicity | Lu et al. 2018 [ | |
| In vitro | PPZ-PDT | Ros increase, Apoptosis, reduction of cell invasion capacity. | Yu et al., 2018 [ | |
| In vitro | ZnPc/BSA-PDT | Ros increase, Autophagy, Apoptosis, reduction of cell invasion capacity. | Yu et al., 2019 [ | |
| In vivo | In vivo (dog) | verteporfin-PDT | Necrosis | Burch et al., 2009 [ |
| In vivo (mouse) | 5,15-bis(2-bromo-5-hydroxyphenyl) porphyrin-PDT | Tumor size reduction. | De Miguel et al., 2018 [ | |
| Clinical trial | 10 patients with primary musculoskeletal sarcomas: six with primary malignant soft tissue sarcoma and four with primary malignant bone tumor (two OS) | AO-PDT | Results: | Kusuzaki et al., 2005 [ |
Abbreviation: PDT Photodynamic Therapy, AO Acridine Orange, hALA Aminolevulinic acid hexyl ester, mTHPC 5,10,15,20-tetrakis(meta-hydroxyphenyl)chlorine, NPe6 N-aspartylchlorin e6, LLLT Low-Level Light Therapy, ALA 5-Aminolevulinic acid, TiO2 @xGd NBs Gd-doped TiO2 nanobeads, PTX-Ce6@Ker paclitaxel loaded in keratine nanoparticles functionalized with the photosensitizer chlorin-e6, BCDP benzochloroporphyrin derivative, HMME Hematoporphyrin Monomethyl Ether, PPZ Zinc Phthalocyanine, ZnPc/BSA Zinc Phthalocyanine Bovine Serum Albumin conjugated.