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A narrow microbeam is more effective for tumor growth suppression than a wide microbeam: an in vivo study using implanted human glioma cells

The tumoricidal mechanisms of microbeam radiation therapy, and the more recently proposed minibeam radiation therapy, for the treatment of brain tumors are as yet unclear. Moreover, from among the various parameters of beam geometry the impact of changing the beam width is unknown. In this study, su...

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Autores principales: Uyama, Atsushi, Kondoh, Takeshi, Nariyama, Nobuteru, Umetani, Keiji, Fukumoto, Manabu, Shinohara, Kunio, Kohmura, Eiji
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Union of Crystallography 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3286866/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21685685
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S090904951101185X
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author Uyama, Atsushi
Kondoh, Takeshi
Nariyama, Nobuteru
Umetani, Keiji
Fukumoto, Manabu
Shinohara, Kunio
Kohmura, Eiji
author_facet Uyama, Atsushi
Kondoh, Takeshi
Nariyama, Nobuteru
Umetani, Keiji
Fukumoto, Manabu
Shinohara, Kunio
Kohmura, Eiji
author_sort Uyama, Atsushi
collection PubMed
description The tumoricidal mechanisms of microbeam radiation therapy, and the more recently proposed minibeam radiation therapy, for the treatment of brain tumors are as yet unclear. Moreover, from among the various parameters of beam geometry the impact of changing the beam width is unknown. In this study, suppression of tumor growth in human glioma cells implanted in mice was evaluated experimentally using microbeams of two different widths: a conventional narrow beam (20 µm width, 100 µm center-to-center distance) and a wide beam (100 µm width, 500 µm center-to-center distance). The tumor growth ratio was compared and acute cell death was studied histologically. With cross-planar irradiation, tumor growth was significantly suppressed between days 4 and 28 after 20 µm microbeam irradiation, whereas tumor growth was suppressed, and not significantly so, only between days 4 and 18 after 100 µm microbeam irradiation. Immunohistochemistry using TUNEL staining showed no increase in TUNEL-positive cells with either microbeam at 24 and 72 h post-irradiation. The 20 µm microbeam was found to be more tumoricidal than the 100 µm microbeam, and the effect was not related to apoptotic cell death. The underlying mechanism may be functional tissue deterioration rather than direct cellular damage in the beam path.
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spelling pubmed-32868662012-02-28 A narrow microbeam is more effective for tumor growth suppression than a wide microbeam: an in vivo study using implanted human glioma cells Uyama, Atsushi Kondoh, Takeshi Nariyama, Nobuteru Umetani, Keiji Fukumoto, Manabu Shinohara, Kunio Kohmura, Eiji J Synchrotron Radiat Research Papers The tumoricidal mechanisms of microbeam radiation therapy, and the more recently proposed minibeam radiation therapy, for the treatment of brain tumors are as yet unclear. Moreover, from among the various parameters of beam geometry the impact of changing the beam width is unknown. In this study, suppression of tumor growth in human glioma cells implanted in mice was evaluated experimentally using microbeams of two different widths: a conventional narrow beam (20 µm width, 100 µm center-to-center distance) and a wide beam (100 µm width, 500 µm center-to-center distance). The tumor growth ratio was compared and acute cell death was studied histologically. With cross-planar irradiation, tumor growth was significantly suppressed between days 4 and 28 after 20 µm microbeam irradiation, whereas tumor growth was suppressed, and not significantly so, only between days 4 and 18 after 100 µm microbeam irradiation. Immunohistochemistry using TUNEL staining showed no increase in TUNEL-positive cells with either microbeam at 24 and 72 h post-irradiation. The 20 µm microbeam was found to be more tumoricidal than the 100 µm microbeam, and the effect was not related to apoptotic cell death. The underlying mechanism may be functional tissue deterioration rather than direct cellular damage in the beam path. International Union of Crystallography 2011-07-01 2011-05-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3286866/ /pubmed/21685685 http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S090904951101185X Text en © Atsushi Uyama et al. 2011 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/uk/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are cited.
spellingShingle Research Papers
Uyama, Atsushi
Kondoh, Takeshi
Nariyama, Nobuteru
Umetani, Keiji
Fukumoto, Manabu
Shinohara, Kunio
Kohmura, Eiji
A narrow microbeam is more effective for tumor growth suppression than a wide microbeam: an in vivo study using implanted human glioma cells
title A narrow microbeam is more effective for tumor growth suppression than a wide microbeam: an in vivo study using implanted human glioma cells
title_full A narrow microbeam is more effective for tumor growth suppression than a wide microbeam: an in vivo study using implanted human glioma cells
title_fullStr A narrow microbeam is more effective for tumor growth suppression than a wide microbeam: an in vivo study using implanted human glioma cells
title_full_unstemmed A narrow microbeam is more effective for tumor growth suppression than a wide microbeam: an in vivo study using implanted human glioma cells
title_short A narrow microbeam is more effective for tumor growth suppression than a wide microbeam: an in vivo study using implanted human glioma cells
title_sort narrow microbeam is more effective for tumor growth suppression than a wide microbeam: an in vivo study using implanted human glioma cells
topic Research Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3286866/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21685685
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S090904951101185X
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