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Lattice or Oxygen-Guided Radiotherapy: What If They Converge? Possible Future Directions in the Era of Immunotherapy

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Oxygen-guided radiotherapy is a new modality for cancer irradiation. Spatially Fractionated Radiation Therapy allows the treatment of hypoxic tumor areas with high radiation doses. Radiotherapy enhances immunotherapy effectiveness. Abscopal and bystander effects are important radiobi...

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Autores principales: Ferini, Gianluca, Valenti, Vito, Tripoli, Antonella, Illari, Salvatore Ivan, Molino, Laura, Parisi, Silvana, Cacciola, Alberto, Lillo, Sara, Giuffrida, Dario, Pergolizzi, Stefano
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8268715/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34209192
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13133290
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author Ferini, Gianluca
Valenti, Vito
Tripoli, Antonella
Illari, Salvatore Ivan
Molino, Laura
Parisi, Silvana
Cacciola, Alberto
Lillo, Sara
Giuffrida, Dario
Pergolizzi, Stefano
author_facet Ferini, Gianluca
Valenti, Vito
Tripoli, Antonella
Illari, Salvatore Ivan
Molino, Laura
Parisi, Silvana
Cacciola, Alberto
Lillo, Sara
Giuffrida, Dario
Pergolizzi, Stefano
author_sort Ferini, Gianluca
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Oxygen-guided radiotherapy is a new modality for cancer irradiation. Spatially Fractionated Radiation Therapy allows the treatment of hypoxic tumor areas with high radiation doses. Radiotherapy enhances immunotherapy effectiveness. Abscopal and bystander effects are important radiobiological issues. The aim of this paper was to analyze the recent development of a particular kind of radiation therapy that is based on high-dose delivery in small areas within large tumor masses. We performed a narrative review of the radiobiological rationale behind a potential benefit by using these techniques combined with immunotherapy and employing personalized target definition according to hypoxic areas. ABSTRACT: Palliative radiotherapy has a great role in the treatment of large tumor masses. However, treating a bulky disease could be difficult, especially in critical anatomical areas. In daily clinical practice, short course hypofractionated radiotherapy is delivered in order to control the symptomatic disease. Radiation fields generally encompass the entire tumor mass, which is homogeneously irradiated. Recent technological advances enable delivering a higher radiation dose in small areas within a large mass. This goal, previously achieved thanks to the GRID approach, is now achievable using the newest concept of LATTICE radiotherapy (LT-RT). This kind of treatment allows exploiting various radiation effects, such as bystander and abscopal effects. These events may be enhanced by the concomitant use of immunotherapy, with the latter being ever more successfully delivered in cancer patients. Moreover, a critical issue in the treatment of large masses is the inhomogeneous intratumoral distribution of well-oxygenated and hypo-oxygenated areas. It is well known that hypoxic areas are more resistant to the killing effect of radiation, hence the need to target them with higher aggressive doses. This concept introduces the “oxygen-guided radiation therapy” (OGRT), which means looking for suitable hypoxic markers to implement in PET/CT and Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Future treatment strategies are likely to involve combinations of LT-RT, OGRT, and immunotherapy. In this paper, we review the radiobiological rationale behind a potential benefit of LT-RT and OGRT, and we summarize the results reported in the few clinical trials published so far regarding these issues. Lastly, we suggest what future perspectives may emerge by combining immunotherapy with LT-RT/OGRT.
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spelling pubmed-82687152021-07-10 Lattice or Oxygen-Guided Radiotherapy: What If They Converge? Possible Future Directions in the Era of Immunotherapy Ferini, Gianluca Valenti, Vito Tripoli, Antonella Illari, Salvatore Ivan Molino, Laura Parisi, Silvana Cacciola, Alberto Lillo, Sara Giuffrida, Dario Pergolizzi, Stefano Cancers (Basel) Review SIMPLE SUMMARY: Oxygen-guided radiotherapy is a new modality for cancer irradiation. Spatially Fractionated Radiation Therapy allows the treatment of hypoxic tumor areas with high radiation doses. Radiotherapy enhances immunotherapy effectiveness. Abscopal and bystander effects are important radiobiological issues. The aim of this paper was to analyze the recent development of a particular kind of radiation therapy that is based on high-dose delivery in small areas within large tumor masses. We performed a narrative review of the radiobiological rationale behind a potential benefit by using these techniques combined with immunotherapy and employing personalized target definition according to hypoxic areas. ABSTRACT: Palliative radiotherapy has a great role in the treatment of large tumor masses. However, treating a bulky disease could be difficult, especially in critical anatomical areas. In daily clinical practice, short course hypofractionated radiotherapy is delivered in order to control the symptomatic disease. Radiation fields generally encompass the entire tumor mass, which is homogeneously irradiated. Recent technological advances enable delivering a higher radiation dose in small areas within a large mass. This goal, previously achieved thanks to the GRID approach, is now achievable using the newest concept of LATTICE radiotherapy (LT-RT). This kind of treatment allows exploiting various radiation effects, such as bystander and abscopal effects. These events may be enhanced by the concomitant use of immunotherapy, with the latter being ever more successfully delivered in cancer patients. Moreover, a critical issue in the treatment of large masses is the inhomogeneous intratumoral distribution of well-oxygenated and hypo-oxygenated areas. It is well known that hypoxic areas are more resistant to the killing effect of radiation, hence the need to target them with higher aggressive doses. This concept introduces the “oxygen-guided radiation therapy” (OGRT), which means looking for suitable hypoxic markers to implement in PET/CT and Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Future treatment strategies are likely to involve combinations of LT-RT, OGRT, and immunotherapy. In this paper, we review the radiobiological rationale behind a potential benefit of LT-RT and OGRT, and we summarize the results reported in the few clinical trials published so far regarding these issues. Lastly, we suggest what future perspectives may emerge by combining immunotherapy with LT-RT/OGRT. MDPI 2021-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8268715/ /pubmed/34209192 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13133290 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Ferini, Gianluca
Valenti, Vito
Tripoli, Antonella
Illari, Salvatore Ivan
Molino, Laura
Parisi, Silvana
Cacciola, Alberto
Lillo, Sara
Giuffrida, Dario
Pergolizzi, Stefano
Lattice or Oxygen-Guided Radiotherapy: What If They Converge? Possible Future Directions in the Era of Immunotherapy
title Lattice or Oxygen-Guided Radiotherapy: What If They Converge? Possible Future Directions in the Era of Immunotherapy
title_full Lattice or Oxygen-Guided Radiotherapy: What If They Converge? Possible Future Directions in the Era of Immunotherapy
title_fullStr Lattice or Oxygen-Guided Radiotherapy: What If They Converge? Possible Future Directions in the Era of Immunotherapy
title_full_unstemmed Lattice or Oxygen-Guided Radiotherapy: What If They Converge? Possible Future Directions in the Era of Immunotherapy
title_short Lattice or Oxygen-Guided Radiotherapy: What If They Converge? Possible Future Directions in the Era of Immunotherapy
title_sort lattice or oxygen-guided radiotherapy: what if they converge? possible future directions in the era of immunotherapy
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8268715/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34209192
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13133290
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