Radiation-induced malignancies after intensity-modulated versus conventional mediastinal radiotherapy in a small animal model

  • Kaga Gomarteli
  • Jens Fleckenstein
  • Stefanie Kirschner
  • Vladimir Bobu
  • Marc A Brockmann
  • Thomas Henzler
  • Mathias Meyer
  • Philipp Riffel
  • Stefan O Schönberg
  • Marlon R Veldwijk
  • Bettina Kränzlin
  • Christian Hoerner
  • Gerhard Glatting
  • Frederik Wenz
  • Carsten Herskind
  • Frank A Giordano

Abstract

A long-standing hypothesis in radiotherapy is that intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) increases the risk of second cancer due to low-dose exposure of large volumes of normal tissue. Therefore, young patients are still treated with conventional techniques rather than with modern IMRT. We challenged this hypothesis in first-of-its-kind experiments using an animal model. Cancer-prone Tp53+/C273X knockout rats received mediastinal irradiation with 3 × 5 or 3 × 8 Gy using volumetric-modulated arc therapy (VMAT, an advanced IMRT) or conventional anterior-posterior/posterior-anterior (AP/PA) beams using non-irradiated rats as controls (n = 15/group, ntotal = 90). Tumors were assigned to volumes receiving 90-107%, 50-90%, 5-50%, and <5% of the target dose and characterized by histology and loss-of-heterozygosity (LOH). Irradiated rats predominantly developed lymphomas and sarcomas in areas receiving 50-107% (n = 26) rather than 5-50% (n = 7) of the target dose. Latency was significantly shortened only after 3 × 8 Gy vs. controls (p < 0.0001). The frequency (14/28 vs. 19/29; p = 0.29) and latency (218 vs. 189 days; p = 0.17) of radiation-associated tumors were similar after VMAT vs. AP/PA. LOH was strongly associated with sarcoma but not with treatment. The results do not support the hypothesis that IMRT increases the risk of second cancer. Thus the current practice of withholding dose-sparing IMRT from young patients may need to be re-evaluated.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN2045-2322
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 29.10.2019
PubMed 31664066