| Literature DB >> 35740531 |
Dominika Skwierawska1, José Antonio López-Valverde2,3, Marcin Balcerzyk2,4, Antonio Leal2,3.
Abstract
Boron Neutron Capture Therapy (BNCT) is a promising binary disease-targeted therapy, as neutrons preferentially kill cells labeled with boron (10B), which makes it a precision medicine treatment modality that provides a therapeutic effect exclusively on patient-specific tumor spread. Contrary to what is usual in radiotherapy, BNCT proposes cell-tailored treatment planning rather than to the tumor mass. The success of BNCT depends mainly on the sufficient spatial biodistribution of 10B located around or within neoplastic cells to produce a high-dose gradient between the tumor and healthy tissue. However, it is not yet possible to precisely determine the concentration of 10B in a specific tissue in real-time using non-invasive methods. Critical issues remain to be resolved if BNCT is to become a valuable, minimally invasive, and efficient treatment. In addition, functional imaging technologies, such as PET, can be applied to determine biological information that can be used for the combined-modality radiotherapy protocol for each specific patient. Regardless, not only imaging methods but also proteomics and gene expression methods will facilitate BNCT becoming a modality of personalized medicine. This work provides an overview of the fundamental principles, recent advances, and future directions of BNCT as cell-targeted cancer therapy for personalized radiation treatment.Entities:
Keywords: BNCT; biological dosimetry; boron imaging; personalized medicine; personalized oncology; targeted therapy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35740531 PMCID: PMC9221296 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14122865
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
Figure 1Standard BNCT procedure. From prior medical examination and diagnosis confirmation with the use of [18F]FBPA PET, through Boron Neutron Capture therapy, to post-therapy monitoring and evaluation.
Figure 210B (n, α)7Li reaction.
Figure 3Schematic representation of BNCT principles of action at a cellular level. Boron accumulation is favored in tumoral cells (thick upper arrow) in comparison with normal cells (thin upper arrow).
Figure 4Cross-sections of reactions that take place because of neutron collisions. 1H (n, γ)2H (blue), 10B (n, α)7Li (magenta), 14N (n, p)14C (red). The figure was plotted using data from ENDF [64].
Figure 5On the left side, the Sumitomo BNCT System NeuCure was recently approved by the Japanese government and is running in two hospitals from early 2020. Image adapted from [116]. On the right side, a compact accelerator of Proteus®ONE protons, installed at Willis-Knighton Center in Los Angeles, USA, clinically used from 2014. Image adapted from [117].