| Literature DB >> 31249831 |
Michael Gérard1,2, Aurélien Corroyer-Dulmont1, Paul Lesueur1,2, Solène Collet1,3, Michel Chérel4, Mickael Bourgeois4, Dinu Stefan2, Elaine Johanna Limkin5, Cécile Perrio6, Jean-Sébastien Guillamo1,7, Bernard Dubray8, Myriam Bernaudin1, Juliette Thariat2, Samuel Valable1.
Abstract
Severe hypoxia [oxygen partial pressure (pO2) below 5-10 mmHg] is more frequent in glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) compared to lower-grade gliomas. Seminal studies in the 1950s demonstrated that hypoxia was associated with increased resistance to low-linear energy transfer (LET) ionizing radiation. In experimental conditions, the total radiation dose has to be multiplied by a factor of 3 to achieve the same cell lethality in anoxic situations. The presence of hypoxia in human tumors is assumed to contribute to treatment failures after radiotherapy (RT) in cancer patients. Therefore, a logical way to overcome hypoxia-induced radioresistance would be to deliver substantially higher doses of RT in hypoxic volumes delineated on pre-treatment imaging as biological target volumes (BTVs). Such an approach faces various fundamental, technical, and clinical challenges. The present review addresses several technical points related to the delineation of hypoxic zones, which include: spatial accuracy, quantitative vs. relative threshold, variations of hypoxia levels during RT, and availability of hypoxia tracers. The feasibility of hypoxia imaging as an assessment tool for early tumor response to RT and for predicting long-term outcomes is discussed. Hypoxia imaging for RT dose painting is likewise examined. As for the radiation oncologist's point of view, hypoxia maps should be converted into dose-distribution objectives for RT planning. Taking into account the physics and the radiobiology of various irradiation beams, preliminary in silico studies are required to investigate the feasibility of dose escalation in terms of normal tissue tolerance before clinical trials are undertaken.Entities:
Keywords: MRI; PET; glioblastoma; hypoxia; imaging; radiation therapy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31249831 PMCID: PMC6582242 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2019.00117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Figure 1Theoretical computational modeling of the OER as a function of pO2 and LET (performed on MATLAB). OER increases nonlinearly with increasing degree of hypoxia and decreases with increasing LET. Compared to low-LET conventional RT (photons or protons), high-LET RT, over a few hundreds of keV/μm (carbons), is expected to be less sensitive to hypoxia and could be more efficient for treating hypoxic tumors.
Imaging biomarkers to evaluate oxygenation in glioblastoma: advantages and limitations.
| StO2 | •Easy setup and application in clinical routine | •Indirect assessment of ptO2 |
| OE-MRI | •Showed promising results in the characterization of intratumor hypoxia heterogeneity in one GBM model | •Indirect assessment of ptO2 |
| MOBILE | •No need to inject contrast agent | •Indirect and relative assessment of ptO2 |
| MR fingerprint | •Multi-parametric (vascularization, oxygenation…) characterization with rapid acquisition | •Indirect and relative assessment of ptO2 |
| 15O-oxygen | ∙Allows direct quantification of OEF | •Very short radioactive decay |
| [18F]-FMISO | •Current gold standard for hypoxia imaging | •Injection of a radioactive compound |
| [18F]-FAZA | •Indicator of cellular hypoxia | •Injection of a radioactive compound |
| [18F]-HX4 | •Indicator of cellular hypoxia | •Injection of a radioactive compound |
| [18F]-DiFA | •Indicator of cellular hypoxia | •Injection of a radioactive contrast agent |
| [62Cu]/[64Cu]-ATSM | •Characterization of moderate hypoxia | •Injection of a radioactive compound with long half-life (12.7 h) |
Figure 2Chemical structure of the various PET tracers designed for hypoxia imaging.
Figure 3The two main approaches of dose painting: by contour (DPBC) or by number (DPBN). For DPBC, added to the standard clinical dose level (in pink), the radiation oncologist manually delineates a uniform HTV (in black) corresponding to a subjective PET-uptake level threshold (dashed line). Note that both methods use PET images, but DPBN requires a mathematical data pre-processing step (*) that computes PET image into a “dose modulation map.” When performed, dose painting allows RT dosimetric simulation for optimal dose escalation.
Figure 4Comparison of dose distribution and target coverage (GBM) in 3D-CRT (A), IMRT (B), and protontherapy (C). (B,C) show finer target coverage with increased normal tissue sparing. For clinical implementation of dose painting, these accurate RT techniques are needed (B,C). In current routine clinical practice, the target volume receives a homogeneous dose prescription and distribution regardless of potential hypoxic subvolumes.