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Review
. 2005 Dec;21(8):779-90.
doi: 10.1080/02656730500271668.

Re-setting the biologic rationale for thermal therapy

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Free article
Review

Re-setting the biologic rationale for thermal therapy

Mark W Dewhirst et al. Int J Hyperthermia. 2005 Dec.
Free article

Abstract

This review takes a retrospective look at how hyperthermia biology, as defined from studies emerging from the late 1970s and into the 1980s, mis-directed the clinical field of hyperthermia, by placing too much emphasis on the necessity of killing cells with hyperthermia in order to define success. The requirement that cell killing be achieved led to sub-optimal hyperthermia fractionation goals for combinations with radiotherapy, inappropriate sequencing between radiation and hyperthermia and goals for hyperthermia equipment performance that were neither achievable nor necessary. The review then considers the importance of the biologic effects of hyperthermia that occur in the temperature range that lies between that necessary to kill substantial proportions of cells and normothermia (e.g. 39-42 degrees C for 1 h). The effects that occur in this temperature range are compelling-including inhibition of radiation-induced damage repair, changes in perfusion, re-oxygenation, effects on macromolecular and nanoparticle delivery, induction of the heat shock response and immunological stimulation, all of which can be exploited to improve tumour response to radiation and chemotherapy. This new knowledge about the biology of hyperthermia compels one to continue to move the field forward, but with thermal goals that are eminently achievable and tolerable by patients. The fact that lower temperatures are incorporated into thermal goals does not lessen the need for non-invasive thermometry or more sophisticated hyperthermia delivery systems, however. If anything, it further compels one to move the field forward on an integrated biological, engineering and clinical level.

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Comment in

  • Thermal medicine, heat shock proteins and cancer.
    van der Zee J, de Bruijne M, van Rhoon GC. van der Zee J, et al. Int J Hyperthermia. 2006 Aug;22(5):433-37; author reply 437-47. doi: 10.1080/02656730600768589. Int J Hyperthermia. 2006. PMID: 16891245 No abstract available.

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