Division of Adult Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland.
Division of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, Diagnostic Department, Geneva University Hospitals, and NimtLab, Faculty of Medicine, Geneva University, Geneva, Switzerland.
J Alzheimers Dis. 2020;74(2):411-419. doi: 10.3233/JAD-190984.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by extracellular amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide aggregates, forming amyloid plaques, and intracellular deposits of phosphorylated tau. Neuroinflammation is now considered as the third hallmark of AD. The majority of clinical trials tested pharmacological strategies targeting amyloid, tau, and neuroinflammation, with disappointing results overall. In parallel, innovative strategies exploring other pathways and approaches are being tested. In this article, we focus on the rationale and preliminary preclinical evidence for a novel application to AD of a widely used therapeutic strategy for oncological and benign conditions: low-dose radiation therapy (LD-RT). LD-RT has shown to be effective against systemic amyloid deposits, as well as against chronic inflammatory diseases, and could thus be able to modulate amyloid load and neuroinflammation in AD. The anti-amyloid effect could be possibly mediated by the LD-RT action on the β-sheet structure of amyloid fibrils, by breaking H-bonds, and depolymerize glucoaminoglycans which are highly radiation-sensitive molecules associated with amyloid fibrils. The anti-inflammatory effect could be linked to the decrease of leukocytes-endothelial cells interactions and to the stimulation of the release of anti-inflammatory molecules. One preclinical study has observed a dramatic reduction of amyloid plaques 4 weeks post-RT, more important with fractionated protocols at low doses than hypofractionated single dose treatments, associated with modulation of inflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines and cognitive improvement. Ongoing Phase I clinical trials will test the ability of LD-RT to hold these promises.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)是一种神经退行性疾病,其特征是细胞外淀粉样β(Aβ)肽聚集,形成淀粉样斑块,以及细胞内磷酸化 tau 的沉积。神经炎症现在被认为是 AD 的第三个标志。大多数临床试验测试了针对淀粉样蛋白、tau 和神经炎症的药物策略,但总体结果令人失望。与此同时,正在测试探索其他途径和方法的创新策略。在本文中,我们重点介绍了一种广泛用于肿瘤学和良性疾病的治疗策略——低剂量放射治疗(LD-RT)在 AD 中的新应用的基本原理和初步临床前证据。LD-RT 已被证明对系统性淀粉样沉积以及慢性炎症性疾病有效,因此可能能够调节 AD 中的淀粉样蛋白负荷和神经炎症。抗淀粉样蛋白作用可能是通过 LD-RT 对淀粉样纤维的β-折叠结构的作用、打破氢键和使与淀粉样纤维高度相关的高度辐射敏感的糖胺聚糖解聚来介导的。抗炎作用可能与白细胞-内皮细胞相互作用的减少以及抗炎分子的释放刺激有关。一项临床前研究观察到 RT 后 4 周淀粉样斑块显著减少,与低剂量的分次方案相比,低剂量的单次分割治疗更为重要,与炎症和抗炎细胞因子的调节以及认知改善有关。正在进行的 I 期临床试验将测试 LD-RT 实现这些承诺的能力。