Abstract

Local hyperthermia of living tissue can cause significant increases in blood flow and oxygenation depending on time-temperature history. Increases in perfusion of the abnormal and insufficient vasculature found in solid tumors may increase tumor oxygenation, thereby increasing the radiation sensitivity of the tumor. We hypothesized that local heating of tumor would increase the oxygenation of the tumor tissue and allow other oxygenating agents to further modify tumor oxygenation and radiation response. In the present study the effect of moderate temperature hyperthermia (MTH) at 41.5–42.5°C for 30–60 min, 250 mg/kg nicotinamide, or carbogen breathing (95% O2/5% CO2) on the radiation sensitivity of FSaII murine fibrosarcomas or R3230 AC rat adenocarcinomas was studied. Individually, these treatments increased the tumor cell sensitivity to single dose 10–15 Gy X-irradiation by 1–5 fold on average, as measured by the in vivo/in vitro tumor excision assay. The combination of tumor MTH with nicotinamide or carbogen breathing increased the radiation sensitivity by 3–5 fold in FSaII tumors and 10–30 fold in R3230 tumors with varying levels of statistical significance. Finally, the triple combination of adjuvant MTH, nicotinamide and carbogen breathing increased the radiation-induced cell death in FSaII tumors to a similar extent as the dual combinations of MTH, nicotinamide or heat, carbogen breathing. However, in R3230 AC tumors the triple adjuvant combination significantly increased radiation-induced cell killing compared to all other dual adjuvant treatments (p < 0.04). To interrogate the mechanism by which heating alters tumor physiology, nitric oxide production in tumor and endothelial cells in culture and tumor tissue after heating was studied. Heating caused an increase in nitric oxide production over a 24 h period after treatment. Subsequently, inhibiting the enzymatic production of NO with L-NAME was found to increase heat-induced growth delay of FSaII tumors. The cause and effect of increased nitric oxide production and the response of the tumor vasculature to heat are discussed in the context of the tumor radiosensitization achieved by heating, carbogen breathing and nicotinamide.

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