| Literature DB >> 31621382 |
Darrell R Fisher1, Janean Fidel2, Charles A Maitz3.
Abstract
Purpose: Yttrium-90 (90Y)-polymer composite (radiogel) may be administered directly into cancerous tissues to deliver highly localized beta radiation for therapy. In a dose-escalation study, the authors investigated the feasibility of treating feline and canine soft-tissue sarcomas as a model for nonresectable solid tumors in humans to gain clinical experience and to identify optimal methods for placing the composite uniformly within target tumor tissue. Materials andEntities:
Keywords: 90Y-radiogel; cancer treatment; radionuclide-polymer composite; sarcoma; therapeutic ratio; yttrium-90
Year: 2019 PMID: 31621382 PMCID: PMC7044762 DOI: 10.1089/cbr.2019.2947
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Biother Radiopharm ISSN: 1084-9785 Impact factor: 3.099
FIG. 1.YPO4 crystalline particles (0.5–2 μm diameter, median diameter of 1.2 μm) imaged by electron microscopy with scale showing a marker scale length of 3.0 μm. YPO4, yttrium phosphate.
FIG. 2.CT radiograph of a canine sarcoma in the hind limb of a dog treated with 90Y-radiogel (variegated darker mass in the upper right). The hyperattenuating material in the tumor relative to surrounding tissues indicates the potential imageability of elemental YPO4 placed into the tumor tissue by direct, interstitial injection. CT, computed tomography.
FIG. 3.PET image of 90Y in the dog sarcoma showing a nearly uniform biodistribution of 90Y activity within the tumor and lack of 90Y counts recorded outside the tumor, indicating successful placement of 90Y-radiogel. PET, positron emission tomography; 90Y, yttrium-90.
FIG. 4.PET/CT coregistered image at about 30 min postinjection, confirming placement of 90Y-radiogel in the canine soft-tissue sarcoma; no evidence of activity migration away from the tumor is visible in this image. The color scale shows isodose curves as percent (ordinate) less than absorbed dose in Gy (abscissa).
FIG. 5.Radiation-related tumor necrosis and inflammation in a H&E-stained histology section obtained from a cat treated for feline sarcoma with 90Y-radiogel. H&E, hematoxylin and eosin.
FIG. 6.Dose-volume histogram calculated by the PET Imalytics software for neighboring bone, inguinal lymph node, patient whole body, and tumor tissue. Therapeutic index may be calculated as the ratio of the areas-under-curve for tumor (dotted red curve) relative to other normal tissues within the same PET image.
Cat and Dog Patients Treated with Yttrium-90-Polymer Composite (Radiogel)
| Tumor type | Starting tumor mass (g) | Prescribed tumor dose (Gy) | [ | Clinical responses | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cat 1 | Fibrosarcoma, lateral thorax | 28.8 | 100 | 68 | Irregular placement; objective response observed on histopathology by profound cell killing in tumor regions where radiogel was delivered. Outwardly the tumor did not respond to injections. Tumor was removed at 6 weeks postinjection with clean, narrow margins; follow-up radiation with 30 Gy was given. Cat is still alive at 30 months. |
| Cat 2 | Feline vaccine-associated soft-tissue sarcoma | 100 | 160 | 377 | Uniform placement; objective tumor response observed on histopathology. No side effects, but the cat was euthanized at 3-weeks post-therapy due to kidney failure unrelated to treatment (a pre-existing kidney disease) |
| Cat 3 | Fibrosarcoma, lateral thorax and ribs | 96.3 | 300 | 680 | Uniformly placed with partial tumor response and necrosis on histopatholgy but no decrease in volume. The cat was euthanized at 6 weeks due to a resistant infection postsurgery unrelated to radiogel treatment; no side effects of therapy were observed. |
| Cat 4 | High-grade feline soft-tissue sarcoma, lateral thigh | 118 | 300 | 777 | Irregular radiogel placement due to tumor skeletal involvement and advanced-stage tumor progression; partial response in treated areas and no adverse effects of therapy. Required surgical excision and 30 Gy external beam; cat well at home 18 months postinjection. |
| Cat 5 | Aggressive fibrosarcoma at site of prior limb amputation | 78.6 | 300 | 566 | Uniform placement with some radiogel leakage due to incorrect mixing; no objective response to therapy, but survived 5 months postinjection. |
| Dog 1 | Soft-tissue sarcoma | 67 | 300 | 474 | Complete response (fully healed at 3 months posttherapy). Edge-of-field recurrence at 8 months posttreatment. Treated again with [ |
| Dog 2 | Soft-tissue sarcoma | 1.14 | 320 | 10.4 | Complete response, no discrete mass. |
| Dog 3 | Soft-tissue sarcoma | 233 | 200 | 1100 | Stable disease and follow-up continues. |
In this dose-escalation study, the specific aim of the cat injections was to investigate and develop best approach and methods. The specific aim of the dog injections was to apply those methods and successfully destroy the tumor mass.
Y, yttrium-90.