| Literature DB >> 32010633 |
Joseph D Wilson1, Ester M Hammond1, Geoff S Higgins1, Kristoffer Petersson1,2.
Abstract
Radiotherapy is a cornerstone of both curative and palliative cancer care. However, radiotherapy is severely limited by radiation-induced toxicities. If these toxicities could be reduced, a greater dose of radiation could be given therefore facilitating a better tumor response. Initial pre-clinical studies have shown that irradiation at dose rates far exceeding those currently used in clinical contexts reduce radiation-induced toxicities whilst maintaining an equivalent tumor response. This is known as the FLASH effect. To date, a single patient has been subjected to FLASH radiotherapy for the treatment of subcutaneous T-cell lymphoma resulting in complete response and minimal toxicities. The mechanism responsible for reduced tissue toxicity following FLASH radiotherapy is yet to be elucidated, but the most prominent hypothesis so far proposed is that acute oxygen depletion occurs within the irradiated tissue. This review examines the tissue response to FLASH radiotherapy, critically evaluates the evidence supporting hypotheses surrounding the biological basis of the FLASH effect, and considers the potential for FLASH radiotherapy to be translated into clinical contexts.Entities:
Keywords: FLASH; hypoxia; immune; normal tissue; radiotherapy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32010633 PMCID: PMC6979639 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2019.01563
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Summary of irradiation parameters and outcomes for in vivo studies investigating the FLASH effect in normal tissues (organized in order of model species and targeted tissue, as well as color coded by radiation modality).
| Zebrafish embryo ( | Fish length | 10–12 | 106-107 | Single pulse | Electron | |
| Zebrafish embryo ( | Fish length, survival, and rate of oedema | 1 | 0–43 | 100 | 0.106 ×109 | Proton |
| Whole body irradiation of mice ( | LD50 | 8–40 | 17–83 | 400 | Electron | |
| Thoracic irradiation of mice ( | TGFβ signaling induction | 17 | 40–60 | 100–150 | Electron | |
| Thoracic irradiation of mice ( | Number of proliferating cells, DNA | 17 | 40–60 | 100–150 | Electron | |
| Abdominal irradiation of mice ( | Survival | <1 | 16 | 35 | Likely 300 | Electron |
| Abdominal irradiation of mice ( | LD50 | 22 | 70–210 | 100–300 | Electron | |
| Abdominal irradiation of mice ( | Survival, stool formation, regeneration in crypts, apoptosis, and DNA damage in crypt cells | 12–16 | 216 | 108 | Electron | |
| Whole brain irradiation of mice ( | Novel object recognition and object location tests | 30 | 200, 300 | 108, 180 | Electron | |
| Whole brain irradiation of mice ( | Variety of neurocognitive tests | 10 | 5.6·106 | Single pulse | Electron | |
| Whole brain irradiation of mice ( | Novel object recognition test | 10 | 30–5.6·106 | 100 or single pulse | Electron | |
| Whole brain irradiation of mice ( | Novel object recognition test | 10 | 5.6–7.8·106 | single pulse | Electron | |
| Whole brain irradiation of mice ( | Novel object recognition test | 10 | 37 | 1,300 | X-ray | |
| Total body and partial body irradiation of mice ( | TD50 | 1 | 3.6–28 | 37–41 | 1,388 | X-ray |
| Thoracic irradiation of mice ( | lung fibrosis, skin dermatitis, | 15, 17.5, 20 | 40 | ? | Proton | |
| Irradiation of mouse tail skin ( | Necrosis ND50 | 30 and 50 | 17–170 | 50 | Electron | |
| Irradiation of mouse skin ( | Early skin reaction score | 50–75 | 2.5 mean, 3 ×104 in the pulse | 23–80 | Electron | |
| Irradiation of rat skin ( | Early skin reaction score | 25–35 | 67 | 400 | Electron | |
| Irradiation of mini-pig skin ( | Skin toxicity | 22–34 | 300 | 100 | Electron | |
Summary of irradiation parameters and outcomes for in vivo studies investigating the FLASH effect in tumor tissues (organized in order of model species and targeted tissue, as well as color coded by radiation modality).
| Thoracic irradiation of orthotopic engrafted non-small cell lung cancer (Lewis lung carcinoma) in mice ( | Tumor size and T-cell Infiltration | 18 | 40 | ? | Proton | |
| Thoracic irradiation of orthotopic engrafted mouse lung carcinoma TC-1 Luc+ in mice ( | Survival and tumor Growth Delay | 1 | 15-28 | 60 | 100–150 | Electron |
| Abdominal irradiation of mice ( | Number of tumors, tumor weights | 1 | 12–16 | 216 | 108 | Electron |
| Whole brain irradiation of nude mice with orthotopic engrafted H454 murine glioblastoma ( | Tumor Growth Delay | 1 | 10–25 | 2.8–5.6·106 | Single pulse | Electron |
| Local irradiation of subcutaneous engrafted Human breast cancer HBCx-12A and head and neck carcinoma HEp-2 in nude mice ( | Tumor Growth Delay | 1 | 15–25 | 60 | 100–150 | Electron |
| Local irradiation of subcutaneous engrafted U87 human glioblastoma in nude mice ( | Tumor Growth Delay | 1 | 0–35 | 125–5.6·106 | 100 or single pulse | Electron |
| Local irradiation of subcutaneous engrafted U87 human glioblastoma in nude mice ( | Tumor Growth Delay | 1 | 10–30 | 125–5.6·106 | 100 or single pulse | Electron |
| Local irradiation of subcutaneous engrafted Human hypopharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma ATCC HTB-43 in nude mice ( | Tumor Growth Delay in irradiated Mice and RBE | 1 | 20 | 0.008 mean, ≈109 in pulse | < <1 | Proton |
| Treatment of locally advanced squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) in cat patients ( | Tumor response and survival | 1 | 25–41 | 130–390 | 100 | Electron |
| Treatment of CD30+ T-cell cutaneous lymphoma | Tumor response | 1 | 15 | 167 | 100 | Electron |
Figure 1(Ideal) Pulsed FLASH-RT delivery. A schematic view of a pulsed beam delivery, specifying some parameters which seems to be important for inducing the FLASH effect.
Figure 2The oxygen depletion hypothesis. The relationship between oxygen tension (horizontal axis) and radiation sensitivity (vertical axis) is shown schematically and has been widely reported (40, 41). In response to FLASH-RT, the physiological level of oxygen (physoxic) found in normal tissues decreases rapidly (pink arrow) and has an important impact on radiation sensitivity. This temporary or transient hypoxia protects the normal tissues as radiation resistance increases. In contrast, oxygen levels are low (hypoxic) in tumor tissues and consequently FLASH-RT has less of an impact on radiation sensitivity.
Some relevant advantages and disadvantages of current and prospective FLASH radiotherapy sources (color coded by radiation modality).
| Conventional electron linear accelerator ( | 1–25 MeV Electrons | Inexpensive. | Poor depth penetration. | Yes, Limited to treating superficial tumors. |
| Very High Energy Electron linear accelerator ( | 100–250 MeV Electrons | Good depth penetration. | Low pulse rate (1–10 Hz) for Laser plasma accelerators. | No |
| Laser plasma accelerators ( | 1–45 MeV Protons | Compact design possible. | Poor depth penetration. | No |
| Cyclotrons, synchrotrons or Synchrocyclotron ( | 100–250 MeV Protons | Good depth penetration. | Large expensive sources. | Yes, |
| X-ray tube ( | 50–250 keV X-rays | Inexpensive. | Very limited depth penetration. | Yes, |
| Synchrotron ( | 50–600 keV X-rays | Microbeam Radiation Therapy possible. | Very large. | Yes, |
| Electron linear accelerator with high density target ( | 6–10 MV X-rays | Good depth penetration. | Multiple beam angles required. | No |