| Literature DB >> 32899466 |
Jonathan R Hughes1, Jason L Parsons1,2.
Abstract
FLASH radiotherapy is the delivery of ultra-high dose rate radiation several orders of magnitude higher than what is currently used in conventional clinical radiotherapy, and has the potential to revolutionize the future of cancer treatment. FLASH radiotherapy induces a phenomenon known as the FLASH effect, whereby the ultra-high dose rate radiation reduces the normal tissue toxicities commonly associated with conventional radiotherapy, while still maintaining local tumor control. The underlying mechanism(s) responsible for the FLASH effect are yet to be fully elucidated, but a prominent role for oxygen tension and reactive oxygen species production is the most current valid hypothesis. The FLASH effect has been confirmed in many studies in recent years, both in vitro and in vivo, with even the first patient with T-cell cutaneous lymphoma being treated using FLASH radiotherapy. However, most of the studies into FLASH radiotherapy have used electron beams that have low tissue penetration, which presents a limitation for translation into clinical practice. A promising alternate FLASH delivery method is via proton beam therapy, as the dose can be deposited deeper within the tissue. However, studies into FLASH protons are currently sparse. This review will summarize FLASH radiotherapy research conducted to date and the current theories explaining the FLASH effect, with an emphasis on the future potential for FLASH proton beam therapy.Entities:
Keywords: FLASH; ionizing radiation; proton beam therapy; radiobiology; radiotherapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32899466 PMCID: PMC7556020 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21186492
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Evidence of normal tissue sparing from FLASH irradiation.
| Model (Site of Irradiation) | Assay/Endpoint | Dose (Gy) | Dose Rate (Gy/s) | Radiation Source | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mice (WBI) 1 | Memory tests, neurogenesis | 10 | >100 | Electron | [ |
| Mice (WBI) 1 | Neurocognitive tests, mature/immature neurons, growth hormone levels | 8 | 4.4 × 106 | Electron | [ |
| Mice (WBI) 1 | Neurocognitive tests, dendritic spine density, microglial activation, inflammation | 30 | 200/300 | Electron | [ |
| Mice (WBI) 1 | Neurocognitive tests, neuroinflammation, neuronal morphology | 10 | >100 | Electron | [ |
| Mice (WBI) 1 | Neurocognitive tests, hippocampal cell division, astrogliosis | 10 | 37 | X-ray | [ |
| Mice (thorax) | Survival, dermatitis, breathing function, lung pathology | 15/17.5/20 | 40 | Proton | [ |
| Mice (thorax) | Lung fibrosis, skin dermatitis, survival | 15/17.5/20 | 40 | Proton | [ |
| Mice (thorax) | Lung fibrosis, TGF-β signaling, apoptosis | 17 | 40–60 | Electron | [ |
| Mice (thorax) | Cellular proliferation, pro-inflammatory gene expression, DNA damage (53BP1/γH2AX foci), senescence | 17 | 40–60 | Electron | [ |
| Mice (abdomen) | Survival | 10–22 | 70–210 | Electron | [ |
| Mice (abdomen) | Survival, stool production, crypt cell regeneration, apoptosis, DNA damage | 12–16 | 216 | Electron | [ |
| Mice (abdomen) | Intestinal crypt cell proliferation | 15 Gy | 78 | Proton | [ |
| Mice (local intestinal) | Fibrosis | 18 Gy | 78 | Proton | [ |
| Mini-pig (skin) | Skin toxicity/injury | 22–34 | 300 | Electron | [ |
| Zebrafish Embryo | Morphology | 8 | >100 | Electron | [ |
1 WBI refers to whole brain irradiation.
Evidence of tumor control from FLASH irradiation.
| Model | Assay/Endpoint | Dose (Gy) | Dose Rate (Gy/s) | Radiation Source | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mice, HBCx-12A, and Hep-2 human xenografts | Tumor growth | 17–25 | 60 | Electron | [ |
| Mice, orthotopic engrafted lung carcinoma luciferase+ TC-1 cells | Tumor growth | 15–28 | 60 | Electron | [ |
| Mice, ID8 syngeneic ovarian cancer | Tumor number/weight | 14 | 216 | Electron | [ |
| Mice, orthotopic engrafted Lewis lung carcinoma | Tumor size | 18 | 40 | Proton | [ |
| Mice, pancreatic MH641905 flank tumor | Tumor growth | 12/15 | 78 | Proton | [ |
| Cat, nasal planum SCC | Tumor growth | 25–41 | 130–390 | Electron | [ |
| Human, CD30+ T-cell cutaneous lymphoma | Tumor response | 15 | 167 | Electron | [ |
Figure 1Comparison of depth–dose distribution of photons, protons, and electrons relative to a target tumor. A spread-out Bragg peak (SOBP) from several modulated proton beams is also shown, but which demonstrates the precise targeting of the tumor using PBT.
Summary of outcomes in in vivo studies comparing FLASH and conventional dose-rate PBT.
| Model | Dose (Gy) | FLASH Dose-Rate (Gy/s) | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zebrafish embryo | 0–43 | 100 | No survival difference | [ |
| Mice (thorax) | 15/17.5/20 | 40 | Normal tissue protection with FLASH | [ |
| Mice (thorax) | 15/17.5/20 | 40 | Normal tissue protection with FLASH | [ |
| Mice (abdomen) | 15 | 78 | Normal tissue protection with FLASH | [ |
| Mice (local intestinal) | 18 | 78 | Normal tissue protection with FLASH | [ |
| Mice, orthotopic engrafted Lewis lung carcinoma (thorax) | 18 | 40 | Improved tumor control with FLASH, increased T-lymphocyte tumor infiltration | [ |
| Mice, pancreatic MH641905 flank tumor | 12/15 | 78 | No difference in tumor control | [ |
| Mice, FaDu head, and neck squamous cell carcinoma transplantation | 17.4 | >109 | No difference in tumor control | [ |