| Literature DB >> 34442469 |
Yoshitaka Matsumoto1,2, Nobuyoshi Fukumitsu3, Hitoshi Ishikawa4, Kei Nakai1,2, Hideyuki Sakurai1,2.
Abstract
In this paper, we discuss the role of particle therapy-a novel radiation therapy (RT) that has shown rapid progress and widespread use in recent years-in multidisciplinary treatment. Three types of particle therapies are currently used for cancer treatment: proton beam therapy (PBT), carbon-ion beam therapy (CIBT), and boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT). PBT and CIBT have been reported to have excellent therapeutic results owing to the physical characteristics of their Bragg peaks. Variable drug therapies, such as chemotherapy, hormone therapy, and immunotherapy, are combined in various treatment strategies, and treatment effects have been improved. BNCT has a high dose concentration for cancer in terms of nuclear reactions with boron. BNCT is a next-generation RT that can achieve cancer cell-selective therapeutic effects, and its effectiveness strongly depends on the selective 10B accumulation in cancer cells by concomitant boron preparation. Therefore, drug delivery research, including nanoparticles, is highly desirable. In this review, we introduce both clinical and basic aspects of particle beam therapy from the perspective of multidisciplinary treatment, which is expected to expand further in the future.Entities:
Keywords: boron neutron capture therapy; carbon-ion beam therapy; combination therapy; drug delivery; particle beam therapy; proton beam therapy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34442469 PMCID: PMC8399040 DOI: 10.3390/jpm11080825
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426
Figure 1Expansion of particle beam therapy facility in Japan.
Figure 2(a) Depth-dose distributions of clinical X-ray, proton, and carbon-ion beams and (b) the spread-out Bragg peak (SOBP).
Figure 3Relationship between RBE, OER, and LETs.
Cardiopulmonary toxicities of photon RT and PBT for esophageal cancer.
| Author | N | RT Modality | Treatment | Endpoint | Late Toxicity Rate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heat | Lung | |||||
| DeCesaris [ | 36 | Photon RT | Preope/definitive | Perioperative death | 13.9% | |
| 18 | Proton | 0% | ||||
| Wang [ | 320 | IMRT | Preope/definitive | Grade 3 (2y/5y) | 18%/21% | NA |
| 159 | Proton | 11%/13% | NA | |||
| Wang [ | 208 | 3DCRT | Preoperative | Perioperative complication | 15.9% | 30.3% |
| 164 | IMRT | 17.1% | 23.8% | |||
| 72 | Proton | 9.7% | 13.9% | |||
| Makishima [ | 19 | 3DCRT | Definitive | Grade 3 | 0% | 10.3% |
| 25 | Proton | 0% | 0% | |||
| Xi [ | 211 | IMRT | Preope/definitive | Grade 3 | 2.4% | 4.7% |
| 132 | Proton | 0.8% | 2.3% | |||
| Lin [ | 61 | IMRT | Preope/definitive | Grade 3 | 5 * | 11 * |
| 46 | Proton | 3 * | 5 * | |||
RT, radiotherapy; IMRT, intensity-modulated radiotherapy; 3DCRT, three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy; NA, not assessed; *, number of events.
Concurrent particle beam therapy combined with chemotherapy for pancreatic cancer.
| Author | N | RT | Dose | Chemotherapy | Treatment | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hong [ | 25 | proton | 30GyRBE/10fr | capecitabine | preoperative | OS: 75%/1Y |
| Terashima [ | 50 | proton | 50GyRBE/25fr | gemcitabine | curative | OS: 76.8%/1Y, PFS: 64.3%/1Y |
| Hong [ | 50 | proton | 25GyRBE/5fr | capecitabine | preoperative | OS: 42%/2Y |
| Maemura [ | 10 | proton | 50GyRBE/25fr | gemcitabine, S-1 | curative | OS: 80, 45, 22.5%/1, 2, 3Y |
| Kim [ | 37 | proton | 45GyRBE/10fr | capecitabine, 5-FU | curative | OS: 75.7%/1Y, PFS: 64.8%/1Y, 19.3M |
| Jethea [ | 13 | proton | 50GyRBE/25fr | capecitabine, 5-FU | curative | OS: 62, 40%/1, 2Y, 16M |
| Hiroshima [ | 42 | proton | 50–67.5GyRBE/25-33fr | gemcitabine, S-1 | curative | OS: 77.5, 50.8%/1, 2Y, 25.6M |
| Kawashiro [ | 72 | carbon | 52.8GyRBE/12fr | gemcitabine, S-1 (n = 56) | curative | OS: 73, 46%/1, 2Y, 21.5M |
| Vitolo [ | carbon | 38.4GyRBE/4fr | FOLFIRINOX, | preoperative |
Value in outcome represents overall survival rate, progression-free survival rate, and median survival time. OS: overall survival, PFS: progression-free survival.
Clinical outcomes of photon and PBT trials for prostate cancer.
| Author | N | RT | Total | Photon (Gy) | Proton (GyRBE) | Efficacy (%) | Late toxicity (Grade 3) (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GI | GU | |||||||
| Shipley [ | 202 | Photon +Proton | 75.6 | 50.4 (pelvis) | 25.2 (local) | 8y-LC:73 | 2.9 | NA |
| Photon | - | 59 | 0 | NA | ||||
| Roach [ | 440 | Photon | 70.2 | 50.4 (pelvis) + 19.8 (local) 70.2 (local) | 7y-PFS:40 | 4.3 | 3 | |
| Photon | 27 | 0 | 0 | |||||
| Local prostate irradiation | ||||||||
| Zeitman [ | 393 | Photon +Proton | 79.2 | 50.4 (local) | 28.8 (local) | 10y-bRF:83 | 1 | 2 |
| Photon +Proton | 19.8 (local) | 67 | 0 | 2 | ||||
| Kuban [ | 301 | Photon | 78.0 | 78.0 (local) | 10y-FFF:73 | 7 | 3 | |
| Photon | 50 | 1 | 5 | |||||
GI, gastrointestinal; GU, genitourinary; LC, local control; PFS, progression-free survival; bRF, biochemical relapse-free; FFF, freedom from any failures.
Figure 4Selective cell destruction using boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT).
The summary of the clinical study cases of head and neck cancer treated using BNCT.
| Facility | Neutron Source | Year | Tumor | Patients No. | Boron Agents | Clinical Course |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Osaka University [ | KUR JRR4 | 2001–2014 | Rec H&N | 45 | BSH, BPA | 5y 32% |
| Kawasaki Medical College [ | KUR JRR4 | 2003–2011 | Rec H&N | 20 | BPA | PR 35% |
| Kawasaki Medical College | KUR JRR4 | 2006–2012 | H&N preop. | 7 | BPA | 5y 42% |
| Helsinki University Central Hospital [ | FiR-1 | 2003–2008 | Rec H&N | 30 | BPA | MST 13mo |
| Taipei Veterans General Hospital [ | THOR | 2010–2011 | Rec H&N | 10 | BPA | PR 40% |
KUR: Kyoto Research Reactor, Kumatori, Osaka, Japan; JRR4: Japan Research Reactor No.4; Tokai, Ibaraki, Japan; FiR-1: Finland Reactor 1, Otaniemi, Finland, THOR: Tsing Hua open-pool Reactor, Hsinchu Taiwan, Rec H&N: recurrent head and neck cancer, H&N preoperative: head and neck cancer patients of preoperative state, BSH: disodium mercaptoundecahydrododecaborate, BPA: L-p boronophenylalanine, 5y: 5 year survival rate, 10y: 10 year survival rate, PR: Partial response rate, CR: Complete response rate, MST: Median overall survival time.
The summary of the recent clinical study cases of glioblastoma treated using BNCT.
| Facility | Neutron Source | Year | Tumor | Patients No. | Boron Agents | Clinical Course (Month) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of Tsukuba [ | JRR4 | 1998–2007 | GBM | 15 | BPA, BSH | MST 23.3 27.1 |
| Tokusima University [ | KUR JRR4 | 1998–2008 | GBM | 23 | BSH | MST 15.5 19.5 26.2 |
| Osaka Medical College [ | KUR | 2002–2006 | GBM | 21 | BPA, BSH | MST 14.5 23.5 |
| 2002–2007 | rGBM | 19 | BSH, BPA | MST 10.8 |
KUR: Kyoto Research Reactor, Kumatori, Osaka, Japan; JRR4: Japan Research Reactor No.4, Tokai, Ibaraki, Japan; GBM: glioblastoma multiforme; rGBM: recurrent glioblastoma; BSH: disodium mercaptoundecahydrododecaborate; BPA L-p boronophenylalanine; MST, median overall survival time.
Figure 5Chemical structures of (a) BPA and (b) BSH, and (c) molecular weight of various compounds.
Figure 6The mechanism of action of ND-BSH. BSH is included in the lumen of ND201 and recognizes cancer cells targeting the folate receptor.
Figure 7(a) Schematic illustration of molecular design for PBA-decorated polymeric nanoparticle as a novel BNCT agent and (b) different accumulation mechanism from BPA-f.
Figure 8Multifunctional cancer growth inhibitory effect by SMA-glucosamine borate complex targeting treatment-resistant cancer cells.
Figure 9Newly developed accelerator-based neutron source (Tsukuba model).