Free Radical and Radiation Biology Program, Department of Radiation Oncology, Free Radical Metabolism and Imaging Program, Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center, The University of Iowa, United States.
Free Radical and Radiation Biology Program, Department of Radiation Oncology, Free Radical Metabolism and Imaging Program, Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center, The University of Iowa, United States.
Radiother Oncol. 2019 Oct;139:23-27. doi: 10.1016/j.radonc.2019.03.028. Epub 2019 Apr 19.
For decades the field of radiation oncology has sought to improve the therapeutic ratio through innovations in physics, chemistry, and biology. To date, technological advancements in image guided beam delivery techniques have provided clinicians with their best options for improving this critical tool in cancer care. Medical physics has focused on the preferential targeting of tumors while minimizing the collateral dose to the surrounding normal tissues, yielding only incremental progress. However, recent developments involving ultra-high dose rate irradiation termed FLASH radiotherapy (FLASH-RT), that were initiated nearly 50 years ago, have stimulated a renaissance in the field of radiotherapy, long awaiting a breakthrough modality able to enhance therapeutic responses and limit normal tissue injury. Compared to conventional dose rates used clinically (0.1-0.2 Gy/s), FLASH can implement dose rates of electrons or X-rays in excess of 100 Gy/s. The implications of this ultra-fast delivery of dose are significant and need to be re-evaluated to appreciate the fundamental aspects underlying this seemingly unique radiobiology. The capability of FLASH to significantly spare normal tissue complications in multiple animal models, when compared to conventional rates of dose-delivery, while maintaining persistent growth inhibition of select tumor models has generated considerable excitement, as well as skepticism. Based on fundamental principles of radiation physics, radio-chemistry, and tumor vs. normal cell redox metabolism, this article presents a series of testable, biologically relevant hypotheses, which may help rationalize the differential effects of FLASH irradiation observed between normal tissue and tumors.
几十年来,放射肿瘤学领域一直试图通过物理学、化学和生物学的创新来提高治疗效果。迄今为止,图像引导束流传输技术的技术进步为临床医生提供了改善癌症治疗这一关键工具的最佳选择。医学物理学一直专注于优先靶向肿瘤,同时最大限度地减少对周围正常组织的附带剂量,仅取得了渐进式的进展。然而,近 50 年前开始的超高速剂量率照射,即 FLASH 放射治疗(FLASH-RT)的最新发展,激发了放射治疗领域的复兴,长期以来一直期待着一种能够增强治疗反应并限制正常组织损伤的突破性治疗方法。与临床上使用的常规剂量率(0.1-0.2Gy/s)相比,FLASH 可以实现超过 100Gy/s 的电子或 X 射线剂量率。这种超快剂量传递的影响是显著的,需要重新评估,以了解这种看似独特的放射生物学背后的基本方面。FLASH 在与常规剂量率相比时,在多种动物模型中显著减少正常组织并发症的能力,同时保持对某些肿瘤模型的持续生长抑制,引起了相当大的兴奋,同时也引起了怀疑。基于放射物理学、放射化学以及肿瘤与正常细胞氧化还原代谢的基本原理,本文提出了一系列可测试的、具有生物学相关性的假设,这些假设可能有助于合理化在正常组织和肿瘤之间观察到的 FLASH 照射的差异效应。