| Literature DB >> 35328787 |
Leyla Moghaddasi1,2, Paul Reid3, Eva Bezak2,4, Loredana G Marcu4,5.
Abstract
The continuously evolving field of radiotherapy aims to devise and implement techniques that allow for greater tumour control and better sparing of critical organs. Investigations into the complexity of tumour radiobiology confirmed the high heterogeneity of tumours as being responsible for the often poor treatment outcome. Hypoxic subvolumes, a subpopulation of cancer stem cells, as well as the inherent or acquired radioresistance define tumour aggressiveness and metastatic potential, which remain a therapeutic challenge. Non-conventional irradiation techniques, such as spatially fractionated radiotherapy, have been developed to tackle some of these challenges and to offer a high therapeutic index when treating radioresistant tumours. The goal of this article was to highlight the current knowledge on the molecular and radiobiological mechanisms behind spatially fractionated radiotherapy and to present the up-to-date preclinical and clinical evidence towards the therapeutic potential of this technique involving both photon and proton beams.Entities:
Keywords: GRID radiotherapy; non-conventional radiotherapy; organ sparing; protons; therapeutic index
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35328787 PMCID: PMC8954016 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23063366
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Schematic representation of the physical, radiobiological, and clinical effects concerning spatially fractionated radiotherapy delivered via photon or proton beams.
Figure 2The diagram demonstrates the therapeutic ratio calculation process for GRID RT with photons [54].
Summary of clinical studies reporting on the response rate and normal tissue complications of GRID RT with photons. FRT: fractionated radiotherapy; CR: complete response rate; PR: partial response rate (50%); NI: not indicated; H&N: head and neck cancer; pCR: pathologic complete response.
| Author (Year) | Number of Patients | Histology | Dose (Gy) | RT Regimen | RT Goal | Overall Response Rate% (CR%,PR%) | Complications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mohiuddin (1990) [ | 22 | Diverse | 10–15 | GRID | Palliative | 91 (26,67) | 5 mild acute, 1 mild late toxicities |
| Mohiuddin (1996) [ | 61 | Diverse | 10–20 | GRID | Palliative | 91 (27,64) | No severe acute toxicity/morbidity |
| Mohiuddin (1999) [ | 63 | Diverse | 10–20 GRID; 50–70 FRT | GRID and GRID + FRT | Palliative | 91 (16,75) | 1 Grade 3 mucositis, 1 acute morbidity |
| 8 | H&N | GRID + FRT | Curative | 100 (63,37) | No Grade 3 or higher | ||
| Kudrimoti (2002) [ | 19 | Melanoma | 12–20 GRID; NI | GRID and GRID + FRT | Palliative | 80 (37,47) | No Grade 3 or higher |
| Sathishkumar (2002) [ | 34 | Diverse | 12–20 GRID; NI | GRID + FRT | Curative | 81 (32,49) | - |
| Sathishkumar (2005) [ | 11 | Diverse | 15 GRID; 60 FRT | GRID + FRT | Curative | 74 | - |
| Huhn (2006) [ | 14 | H&N | 15–20 GRID; 54–79 FRT | GRID + FRT | Curative | Neck control: 93% | Acute and late toxicities of Grades 1–2 |
| 13 | GRID + FRT + Surgery | Neck control: 92% | |||||
| Somaiah (2008) [ | 10 | NSCLC | 15 GRID; 60 FRT | GRID + FRT | Palliative | (71.4,28.5) | No Grade 3 or higher |
| Mohiuddin (2009) [ | 33 | Sarcoma | 12–20 GRID; 22–70 FRT | GRID and GRID + FRT | Palliative | 76 (26,50) | Mild acute and late toxicities; 2 Grade 3 acute skin reaction |
| Penagaricano (2010) [ | 14 | H&N | 20 GRID; 54–66 IMRT | GRID + Chemo + IMRT | Curative | 79 | Acute and late toxicities of Grades 1–3, 1 death carotid blow-in |
| Neuner (2012) [ | 39 cerrobend) | Diverse | 10–20 GRID; 12–70 FRT | GRID and GRID + FRT | Palliative+ Curative | Pain: 75 (25,50) | Acute and late toxicities of Grades 1–2; 2 acute Grades 3–4 |
| 40 (MLC) | Pain: 74 (30,44) | Acute and late toxicities of Grade 1–2; 6 acute and 3 late Grades 3–4 | |||||
| Kaiser (2013) [ | 1 | Sarcoma | 18 GRID; 32 FRT | GRID + FRT | Curative | 90% tumour regression | No skin toxicity |
| Mohiuddin (2014) [ | 14 | Sarcoma | 18 GRID; 50 FRT | GRID + FRT + Surgery | Curative | pCR (>90% necrosis): 65% | 1 Grade 3 acute skin reaction; 2 late wound healing |
| Edwards (2015) [ | 53 | H&N (T4 & N3) | 15 GRID; 48–79.2 FRT | GRID + FRT | Curative | 91% clinical local control | 4% > Grade 3 toxicity; 2 requiring feeding tube |
| Choi (2019) [ | 7 | H&N | 15–20 GRID; Variable | GRID + FRT | Palliative | 70 | 1 Grade 3, 4 Grade 4 acute toxicity |
| 8 | Curative | 87.5 (44.4,13) | |||||
| Snider (2020) [ | 26 | Sarcoma | 15 GRID; 45–50.4 FRT | GRID + FRT | Curative | pCR (>80% necrosis): 35.3% | 27% > Grade 3 acute skin toxicity |
| Grams (2020) [ | 2 | Pancreas; Abdominal leiomyosarcoma | 20 GRID; 20–30 FRT | GRID + FRT | Palliative | marked reduction in tumour size; symptomatic relief | NI |
| Tajiki (2021) [ | 1 | Sarcoma | 15 GRID; 50 FRT | GRID + FRT |
Abbreviations: NSCLC = non-small cell lung cancer; IMRT = intensity modulated radiation therapy; MLC = multileaf collimator.
Compilation of animal studies investigating normal tissue effects and/or tumour control after proton minibeam irradiation.
| Study Aim | Treatment Protocol | Observations |
|---|---|---|
| Normal tissue toxicity evaluation after mouse ear irradiation | ||
| Comparative study of mouse ear irradiation | (1) Homogenous 20 MeV proton field of overall 60 Gy | Up to 4-times greater extent of ear swelling, erythema, and desquamation in the homogenous group vs. minibeam. Hair loss and damage to the sebaceous glands observed only in the homogenously exposed group. |
| Minibeam size dependence of normal tissue effects in mouse ear | 20 MeV minibeam (4 × 4 minibeams, 1.8 mm centre-to-centre beam distance) of a 6 kGy peak dose, with various beam sizes | The ideal minibeam size for minimal side effects should be < 0.1 mm. Still, any spatial fractionation with a beam size < 1 mm leads to superior normal tissue protection as compared to homogenous irradiation. |
| Normal tissue toxicity and tumour control evaluation after high-grade glioma treatment in rats | ||
| The effect of proton minibeam vs. standard proton therapy on rat high-grade gliomas | (1) Standard proton therapy of 100 MeV with 2 Gy/min at a 1 cm depth of 25 Gy in one fraction | Main aim: to evaluate the reduction in neurotoxicity with proton minibeam. Rats under standard proton therapy developed significant skin damage and long-term brain damage (after 6 mo of evaluation) as compared to minimal toxicity in the minibeam group. |
| Tumour control of high-grade gliomas in rats with proton minibeam | 100 MeV proton minibeam of 400 μm-wide slits and a 3200 μm centre-to-centre distance, 70 Gy peak dose at a 1 cm depth; one dose fraction | 22% disease-free long-term survival (6 mo follow-up) in the treated group. Mean survival time of the control group (untreated): 18 d; mean survival time of minibeam group: 32.5 d. |
| Evaluation of cerebral functions in rats with high-grade gliomas after proton minibeam | 100 MeV proton minibeam with a 57 Gy peak dose at a 1 cm depth. Minibeam width at 1 cm was 1100 ± 50 μm. | No locomotory, behavioural, or cognitive differences observed between proton minibeam and control (unirradiated) groups. Small growth perturbation was observed in the treated group (12.5% lower body weight and size). |