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Toward Neuro-Oncologic Clinical Trials of High-Dose-Rate Synchrotron Microbeam Radiation Therapy: First Treatment of a Spontaneous Canine Brain Tumor

Authors :
Jean-François Adam
Jacques Balosso
Sam Bayat
Paul Berkvens
Gilles Berruyer
Elke Bräuer-Krisch
Thierry Brochard
Gabriel Chamel
Andréa Desagneaux
Renaud Drevon-Gaud
Laura Eling
François Estève
Isabelle Flandin
Maxime Gaudin
Jean-Yves Giraud
Lucile Giraud
Hervé Gonzalez
Samy Kefs
Sarvenaz Keshmiri
Alexandre Krainik
Michael Krisch
Jean Albert Laissue
Gaëtan Lemaire
Anthony Mauro
Christian Nemoz
Paolo Pellicioli
Michel Renier
Camille Verry
Raphael Serduc
Source :
International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics. 113(5)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The high potential of microbeam radiation therapy (MRT) in improving tumor control while reducing side effects has been shown by numerous preclinical studies. MRT offers a widened therapeutic window by using the periodical spatial fractionation of synchrotron generated x-rays into an array of intense parallel microbeams. MRT now enters a clinical transfer phase. As proof of principle and cornerstone for the safe clinical transfer of MRT, we conducted a "first in dog" trial under clinical conditions. In this report, we evaluated whether a 3-dimensional conformal MRT can be safely delivered as exclusive radiosurgical treatment in animal patients METHODS AND MATERIALS: We irradiated a 17.5-kg French bulldog for a spontaneous brain tumor (glioma suspected on magnetic resonance imaging) with conformal high-dose-rate microbeam arrays (50-µm-wide microbeams, replicated with a pitch of 400 μm) of synchrotron-generated x-rays. The dose prescription adjusted a minimal cumulated valley dose of 2.8 Gy to the plnning target volume (PTV) (cinical target volume (CTV)+ 1 mm). Thus, each beam delivered 20 to 25 Gy to the target as peak doses, and ∼1 Gy as valley doses RESULTS: The treatment was successfully delivered. Clinical follow-up over 3 months showed a significant improvement of the dog's quality of life: the symptoms disappeared. Magnetic resonance imaging, performed 3 months after irradiation, revealed reduction in tumor size (-87.4%) and mass effect with normalization of the left lateral ventricle.To our knowledge, this neuro-oncologic veterinary trial is the first 3-dimensional conformal synchrotron x-ray MRT treatment of a spontaneous intracranial tumor in a large animal. It is an essential last step toward the clinical transfer of MRT in the near future to demonstrate the feasibility and safety of treating deep-seated tumors using synchrotron-generated microbeams.

Details

ISSN :
1879355X
Volume :
113
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....770783ae497d7693b504090ed096e734