학술논문

Abdominal FLASH irradiation reduces radiation-induced gastrointestinal toxicity for the treatment of ovarian cancer in mice
Document Type
article
Source
Scientific Reports. 10(1)
Subject
Digestive Diseases
Vaccine Related
Prevention
Rare Diseases
Biodefense
Ovarian Cancer
Orphan Drug
Cancer
Animals
Female
Gastrointestinal Tract
Mice
Mice
Inbred C57BL
Ovarian Neoplasms
Radiation Injuries
Experimental
Radiotherapy
Regenerative Medicine
Stem Cell Research
Genetics
Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Non-Human
Adult Stem Cells
Apoptosis
Bone Marrow
Cell Cycle Checkpoints
DNA Breaks
Double-Stranded
DNA Repair
Jejunum
Mice
Transgenic
Radiation Tolerance
Language
Abstract
Radiation therapy is the most effective cytotoxic therapy for localized tumors. However, normal tissue toxicity limits the radiation dose and the curative potential of radiation therapy when treating larger target volumes. In particular, the highly radiosensitive intestine limits the use of radiation for patients with intra-abdominal tumors. In metastatic ovarian cancer, total abdominal irradiation (TAI) was used as an effective postsurgical adjuvant therapy in the management of abdominal metastases. However, TAI fell out of favor due to high toxicity of the intestine. Here we utilized an innovative preclinical irradiation platform to compare the safety and efficacy of TAI ultra-high dose rate FLASH irradiation to conventional dose rate (CONV) irradiation in mice. We demonstrate that single high dose TAI-FLASH produced less mortality from gastrointestinal syndrome, spared gut function and epithelial integrity, and spared cell death in crypt base columnar cells compared to TAI-CONV irradiation. Importantly, TAI-FLASH and TAI-CONV irradiation had similar efficacy in reducing tumor burden while improving intestinal function in a preclinical model of ovarian cancer metastasis. These findings suggest that FLASH irradiation may be an effective strategy to enhance the therapeutic index of abdominal radiotherapy, with potential application to metastatic ovarian cancer.