Department of Surgery, Samsung Medical Center, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea.
Department of Radiation Oncology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.
Clin Cancer Res. 2020 Jul 1;26(13):3079-3090. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-19-2744. Epub 2020 Feb 25.
A percentage of long-term cancer survivors who receive pelvic irradiation will develop treatment-related late effects, collectively termed pelvic radiation disease. Thus, there is a need to prevent or ameliorate treatment-related late effects in these patients. Modern radiotherapy methods can preferentially protect normal tissues from radiation toxicities to permit higher doses to targets. However, concerns about chronic small bowel toxicity, for example, still constrain the prescription dose. This provides strong rationale for considering adding pharmacologic mitigators. Implementation of modern targeted radiotherapy methods enables delivery of focused radiation to target volumes, while minimizing dose to normal tissues. In prostate cancer, these technical advances enabled safe radiation dose escalation and better local tumor control without increasing normal tissue complications. In other pelvic diseases, these new radiotherapy methods have not resulted in the low probability of normal tissue damage achieved with prostate radiotherapy. The persistence of toxicity provides rationale for pharmacologic mitigators. Several new agents could be readily tested in clinical trials because they are being or have been studied in human patients already. Although there are promising preclinical data supporting mitigators, no clinically proven options to treat or prevent pelvic radiation disease currently exist. This review highlights therapeutic options for prevention and/or treatment of pelvic radiation disease, using pharmacologic mitigators. Successful development of mitigators would reduce the number of survivors who suffer from these devastating consequences of pelvic radiotherapy. It is important to note that pharmacologic mitigators to ameliorate pelvic radiation disease may be applicable to other irradiated sites in which chronic toxicity impairs quality of life.
一部分接受盆腔放疗的长期癌症幸存者会出现与治疗相关的迟发性效应,统称为盆腔放射病。因此,有必要预防或减轻这些患者的治疗相关迟发性效应。现代放疗方法可以优先保护正常组织免受辐射毒性,从而允许对靶区给予更高剂量。然而,例如对慢性小肠毒性的担忧仍然限制了处方剂量。这为考虑添加药物缓解剂提供了强有力的理由。现代靶向放疗方法的实施能够将集中的辐射传递到靶区,同时将正常组织的剂量降至最低。在前列腺癌中,这些技术进步使安全的放疗剂量递增和更好的局部肿瘤控制成为可能,而不会增加正常组织并发症。在其他盆腔疾病中,这些新的放疗方法并没有像前列腺放疗那样,使正常组织损伤的概率降低。毒性的持续存在为药物缓解剂提供了依据。由于这些药物已经或正在进行人体研究,因此有几种新的药物可以很容易地在临床试验中进行测试。尽管有支持缓解剂的有前途的临床前数据,但目前还没有经临床证实的治疗或预防盆腔放射病的方法。本综述强调了使用药物缓解剂预防和/或治疗盆腔放射病的治疗选择。缓解剂的成功开发将减少遭受这些盆腔放疗毁灭性后果的幸存者人数。需要注意的是,用于减轻盆腔放射病的药物缓解剂可能适用于其他因慢性毒性而影响生活质量的受照射部位。