| Literature DB >> 36035401 |
Jinyu Wang1, Sheng Li2.
Abstract
Cancer is one of the most important public health issues worldwide. Radiation therapy (XRT), chemotherapy, and targeted therapy are some of the main types of cancer therapy. Metals are used extensively in cancer diagnosis and therapy, and rare earth elements occupy an important niche in these areas. In recent years, an increasing number of studies have focused on the application of lanthanides in cancer diagnosis and therapy. However, no research has analyzed the current status and future trends of lanthanides in treating cancer. We downloaded data from publications from the Web of Science Core Collection. We used VOSviewer 1.16.16 software and Excel 2016 to analyze literature information, including publication years, journals, countries, institutes, authors, keywords, and co-cited references. A total of 7,849 publications were identified. The first study on the association of rare earth elements with cancer was published in 1945. However, before 1979, the number of publications per year was no more than 10. After 1980, the number of yearly publications increased. The United States was the most productive country (2,726, 34.73%), and the institution with the most frequent contributions was the Chinese Academy of Sciences (211, 2.69%). We observed close collaboration between countries and between institutes. The 7,839 publications were published in 1,579 journals, and Radiology was both the most productive journal (183, 2.33%) and cited journal (5,863 citations). A total of 33,987 authors investigated rare earth elements and cancer. Only 0.45% of the authors published more than 10 publications, and 79.07% of the authors published only one publication. Of the top 10 high-yield authors, seven were from developed countries and three were from China. However, among the top 10 co-cited authors, there was only one high-yield author. The main research topics in the application of lanthanide complex-doped nanomaterials in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer include magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents, photodynamic therapy, anticancer drug delivery, the efficacy and safety of yttrium-90 radioimmunotherapy and chemoembolization for the treatment of HCC, gadolinium magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agent for cancer diagnosis, and cerium oxide nanoparticles. In recent years, especially since 2016, the research frontiers are emerging in cerium oxide nanoparticles and photodynamic therapy. Studies related to the application of rare earth elements and cancer have significantly increased over the past 20 years. The United States contributed the most articles in the field, followed by China and Germany, and cooperation among countries was frequent. The Chinese Academy of Sciencess, Northwestern University, and Stanford University were the three most productive institutions, and cooperation among institutions was frequent. Many high-quality journals have published relevant research, but there are few highly productive journals.Entities:
Keywords: VOS viewer; cancer; evidence mapping; rare earth elements; scientometric analysis
Year: 2022 PMID: 36035401 PMCID: PMC9399464 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2022.946100
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
FIGURE 1Publication years and growth forecast.
The top 10 authors and co-cited authors in the research on the association of rare earth elements with cancer [n (%)].
| Rank | Authors | N (%) | Co-cited authors | Citations |
| 1 | Salem R | 83 (1.06) | Salem R | 820 (10.45) |
| 2 | Lewandowski R. J | 52 (0.66) | Wang F | 552 (7.03) |
| 3 | Seal S | 35 (0.45) | Caravan P | 417 (5.31) |
| 4 | Tillement O | 30 (0.38) | Aime S | 354 (4.47) |
| 5 | Chen XY | 28 (0.36) | Bunzli JCG | 351 (4.45) |
| 6 | Miller R | 28 (0.36) | Chen GY | 340 (4.33) |
| 7 | Semelka R | 28 (0.36) | Kennedy AS | 316 (4.03) |
| 8 | Lux F | 27 (0.34) | Zhou J | 308 (3.92) |
| 9 | Lam M G. E. H | 26 (0.33) | Runge VM | 294 (3.75) |
| 10 | Lin J | 26 (0.33) | Kostova I | 283 (3.61) |
FIGURE 2The network map of countries.
The top 10 countries and institutions contributed to publications in the research on the association of rare earth elements with cancer [n (%)].
| Rank | Country | N (%) | Institution | N (%) |
| 1 | United States | 2,726 (34.73) | Chinese Academy of Sciences (China, Beijing) | 211 (2.69) |
| 2 | China | 1,246 (16.10) | Northwestern University (United States, Evanston) | 128 (1.63) |
| 3 | Germany | 509 (6.48) | Stanford University (United States, Palo Alto) | 89 (1.13) |
| 4 | Italy | 391 (4.98) | Fudan University (China, Shanghai) | 77 (0.98) |
| 5 | France | 367 (4.76) | University of Texas (United States, Texas) | 76 (0.97) |
| 6 | Japan | 366 (4.66) | Mayo Clinic (United States, Rochester) | 71 (0.90) |
| 7 | India | 282 (3.59) | National cancer institute (United States) | 63 (0.80) |
| 8 | South Korea | 228 (2.90) | University of California. Los Angeles (United States, Los Angeles) | 62 (0.79) |
| 9 | Netherland | 209 (2.66) | University of Pittsburgh (United States, Pittsburgh) | 59 (0.75) |
| 10 | Canada | 207 (2.64) | University of Pennsylvania (United States, Philadelphia) | 58 (0.74) |
FIGURE 3The network map of institutions.
FIGURE 4The network map of authors.
The top 10 journals and co-cited journals in the research on the association of rare earth elements with cancer [n (%)].
| Rank | Journals | N (%) | Country | IF (2020) | Co-cited journals | Co-citation | Country | IF (2020) |
| 1 | Radiology | 183 (2.33) | United States | 11.105 | Radiology | 5,863 | United States | 11.105 |
| 2 | Journal of nuclear medicine | 173 (2.20) | United States | 10.057 | Journal of the American Chemical Society | 5,611 | United States | 15.419 |
| 3 | Journal of vascular and interventional radiology | 139 (1.77) | United States | 3.464 | Biomaterials | 4,127 | Netherlands | 12.479 |
| 4 | The journal of urology | 139 (1.77) | Netherlands | 7.45 | ACS Nano | 3,563 | United States | 15.881 |
| 5 | Blood | 132 (1.68) | United States | 22.113 | Angewandte chemie-international edition | 3,545 | Germany | 15.336 |
| 6 | International journal of radiation oncology biology physics | 122 (1.55) | Netherlands | 7.038 | Journal of nuclear medicine | 3,526 | United States | 10.057 |
| 7 | European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imagine | 103 (1.31) | Germany | 9.236 | Advanced materials | 2,404 | United States | 30.849 |
| 8 | Journal of clinical oncology | 102 (1.30) | United States | 44.544 | Chemical reviews | 2,356 | United States | 60.622 |
| 9 | Lasers in surgery and medicine | 100 (1.27) | United States | 4.025 | Chemical society review | 2,317 | United Kingdom | 54.564 |
| 10 | Journal of endourology | 78 (1.00) | United States | 2.942 | Journal of clinical oncology | 2,272 | United States | 44.544 |
The top 10 rare earth elements in the research on the association of rare earth elements with cancer.
| Rank | Rare earth elements |
|
| 1 | Gadolinium | 492 |
| 2 | Lanthanum | 385 |
| 3 | Yttrium | 353 |
| 4 | Cerium | 261 |
| 5 | Holmium | 121 |
| 6 | Lutetium | 107 |
| 7 | Europium | 89 |
| 8 | Neodymium | 48 |
| 9 | Thulium | 46 |
| 10 | Ytterbium | 35 |
FIGURE 5The density map of keywords.
The top 20 keywords in terms of frequency in the research on the association of rare earth elements with cancer.
| Rank | Keywords |
| Rank | Keywords |
|
| 1 | Cancer | 948 | 11 | Cerium Oxide Nanoparticles | 231 |
| 2 | Nanoparticles | 502 | 12 | Toxicity | 225 |
| 3 | Therapy | 467 | 13 | Photodynamic therapy | 222 |
| 4 | Gadolinium | 341 | 14 |
| 221 |
| 5 | Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 566 | 15 | Survival | 218 |
| 6 | Radioembolization | 281 | 16 | Oxidative stress | 217 |
| 7 | Cells | 257 | 17 | Hepatocellular-carcinoma | 210 |
| 8 | Contrast agents | 254 | 18 | Radiotherapy | 209 |
| 9 |
| 244 | 19 | Drug-delivery | 202 |
| 10 | Luminescence | 240 | 20 | Chemotherapy | 201 |
FIGURE 6The network map of keywords.
FIGURE 7The overlay map of keywords.
The top 10 co-cited references in terms of the research on the association of rare earth elements with cancer [n (%)].
| Rank | Co-cited references | Co-citation |
| 1 | Caravan P, 1999. Gadolinium (III) Chelates as MRI Contrast Agents: Structure, Dynamics, and Applications. Chem Rev. V99, P2293. | 239 |
| 2 | Salem R, 2006. Radioembolization with 90 Yttrium microspheres: a state-of-the-art brachytherapy treatment for primary and secondary liver malignancies. Part 1: Technical and methodologic considerations. J Vasc Interv Radiol. V17, P1251. | 140 |
| 3 | Pirmohamed T, 2010. Nanoceria exhibit redox state-dependent catalase mimetic activity. Chem Commun (Camb). V4, P2736. | 120 |
| 4 | Weinmann HJ, 1984. Characteristics of gadolinium-DTPA complex: a potential NMR contrast agent. AJR Am J Roentgenol. V142, P619 | 119 |
| 5 | Korsvik C, 2007. Superoxide dismutase mimetic properties exhibited by vacancy engineered ceria nanoparticles. Chem Commun (Camb). V142, P619 | 117 |
| 6 | Mosmann T, 1983. Rapid colorimetric assay for cellular growth and survival: application to proliferation and cytotoxicity assays. J Immunol Methods. V65, P55 | 117 |
| 7 | Kennedy A, 2007. Recommendations for radioembolization of hepatic malignancies using yttrium-90 microsphere brachytherapy: a consensus panel report from the radioembolization brachytherapy oncology consortium. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. V68, P13 | 116 |
| 8 | Tarnuzzer RW, 2005. Vacancy engineered ceria nanostructures for protection from radiation-induced cellular damage. Nano Lett. V5, P2573 | 114 |
| 9 | Salem R, 2010. Radioembolization for hepatocellular carcinoma using Yttrium-90 microspheres: a comprehensive report of long-term outcomes. Gastroenterology. V138, P52 | 104 |
| 10 | Bünzli JC, 2010. Lanthanide luminescence for biomedical analyses and imaging. Chem Rev. V110, P2729 | 104 |