Imaging radiation-induced normal tissue injury
- PMID: 22348250
- PMCID: PMC3733443
- DOI: 10.1667/rr2530.1
Imaging radiation-induced normal tissue injury
Abstract
Technological developments in radiation therapy and other cancer therapies have led to a progressive increase in five-year survival rates over the last few decades. Although acute effects have been largely minimized by both technical advances and medical interventions, late effects remain a concern. Indeed, the need to identify those individuals who will develop radiation-induced late effects, and to develop interventions to prevent or ameliorate these late effects is a critical area of radiobiology research. In the last two decades, preclinical studies have clearly established that late radiation injury can be prevented/ameliorated by pharmacological therapies aimed at modulating the cascade of events leading to the clinical expression of radiation-induced late effects. These insights have been accompanied by significant technological advances in imaging that are moving radiation oncology and normal tissue radiobiology from disciplines driven by anatomy and macrostructure to ones in which important quantitative functional, microstructural, and metabolic data can be noninvasively and serially determined. In the current article, we review use of positron emission tomography (PET), single photon emission tomography (SPECT), magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and MR spectroscopy to generate pathophysiological and functional data in the central nervous system, lung, and heart that offer the promise of, (1) identifying individuals who are at risk of developing radiation-induced late effects, and (2) monitoring the efficacy of interventions to prevent/ameliorate them.
Figures
References
-
- Perez C, Brady LW. Principles and Practice of Radiation Oncology. Lippincott-Raven; Philadelphia: 2003.
-
- Jemal A, Siegel R, Xu J, Ward E. Cancer statistics. Ca. Cancer J. Clin. 2010;60:277–300. - PubMed
-
- Bentzen SM. Preventing or reducing late side effects of radiation therapy: radiobiology meets molecular pathology. Nat. Rev. Cancer. 2006;6:702–713. - PubMed
-
- Rubin P, Finkelstein J, Shapiro D. Molecular biology mechanisms in the radiation induction of pulmonary injury syndromes: Interrelationship between the alveolar macrophages and the septal fibroblast. Int. J. Radiat. Oncol. Biol. Phys. 1992;24:93–101. - PubMed
-
- Tofilon PJ, Fike JR. The radioresponse of the central nervous system: a dynamic process. Radiat. Res. 2000;153:357–370. - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
- R21 CA113699/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States
- R01 CA122318/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States
- CA112593/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States
- Z01 BC010663/ImNIH/Intramural NIH HHS/United States
- CA119990/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States
- R29 CA069579/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States
- L30 CA154094/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States
- CA122318/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States
- R01 CA069579/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States
- CA113699/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States
- CA69579/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States
- P01 CA059827/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States
- CA59827/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States
- R01 CA119990/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States
- R01 CA112593/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
