Daniel Melissa, Luby Alexandra O, Buchman Lauren, Buchman Steven R
Department of Surgery, Section of Plastic Surgery, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.
Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open. 2021 Jun 29;9(6):e3605. doi: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000003605. eCollection 2021 Jun.
The incidence of cancer worldwide is expected to be more than 22 million annually by 2030. Approximately half of these patients will likely require radiation therapy. Although radiotherapy has been shown to improve disease control and increase survivorship, it also results in damage to adjacent healthy tissues, including the bone, which can lead to devastating skeletal complications, such as nonunion, pathologic fractures, and osteoradionecrosis. Pathologic fractures and osteoradionecrosis are ominous complications that can result in large bone and soft tissue defects requiring complex reconstruction. Current clinical management strategies for these conditions are suboptimal and dubious at best. The gold standard in treatment of severe radiation injury is free tissue transfer; however, this requires a large operation that is limited to select candidates.
With the goal to expand current treatment options and to assuage the devastating sequelae of radiation injury on surrounding normal tissue, our laboratory has performed years of translational studies aimed at remediating bone healing and regeneration in irradiated fields. Three therapeutics (amifostine, deferoxamine, and adipose-derived stem cells) have demonstrated great promise in promoting healing and regeneration of irradiated bone.
Amifostine confers prophylactic protection, whereas deferoxamine and adipose-derived stem cells function to remediate postradiation associated injury.
These prospective therapeutics exploit a mechanism attributed to increasing angiogenesis and ultimately function to protect or restore cellularity, normal cellular function, osteogenesis, and bone healing to nonirradiated metrics. These discoveries may offer innovative treatment alternatives to free tissue transfer with the added benefit of potentially preventing and treating osteoradionecrosis and pathologic fractures.
预计到2030年,全球每年癌症发病率将超过2200万。这些患者中约有一半可能需要放射治疗。尽管放射治疗已被证明可改善疾病控制并提高生存率,但它也会对包括骨骼在内的邻近健康组织造成损害,从而导致严重的骨骼并发症,如骨不连、病理性骨折和放射性骨坏死。病理性骨折和放射性骨坏死是严重的并发症,可导致大面积的骨和软组织缺损,需要进行复杂的重建。目前针对这些病症的临床管理策略充其量是次优且可疑的。治疗严重放射性损伤的金标准是游离组织移植;然而,这需要进行大型手术,且仅限于特定的候选患者。
为了扩大当前的治疗选择,并缓解放射损伤对周围正常组织造成的毁灭性后遗症,我们实验室进行了多年的转化研究,旨在修复照射区域的骨愈合和再生。三种治疗方法(氨磷汀、去铁胺和脂肪干细胞)在促进照射后骨的愈合和再生方面显示出巨大的潜力。
氨磷汀具有预防性保护作用,而去铁胺和脂肪干细胞则起到修复放射后相关损伤的作用。
这些前瞻性治疗方法利用了一种与增加血管生成相关的机制,最终起到保护或恢复细胞数量、正常细胞功能、骨生成以及使骨愈合恢复到未受照射时水平的作用。这些发现可能为游离组织移植提供创新的治疗替代方案,还可能具有预防和治疗放射性骨坏死及病理性骨折的额外益处。