Abstract

Targeted alpha therapy (TAT) using alpha particle-emitting radionuclides is in the spotlight after the approval of 223RaCl2 for patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer and the development of several alpha emitter-based radiopharmaceuticals. It is acknowledged that alpha particles are highly cytotoxic because they produce complex DNA lesions. Hence, the nucleus is considered their critical target, and many studies did not report any effect in other subcellular compartments. Moreover, their physical features, including their range in tissues (<100 μm) and their linear energy transfer (50–230 keV/μm), are well-characterized. Theoretically, TAT is indicated for very small-volume, disseminated tumors (e.g., micrometastases, circulating tumor cells). Moreover, due to their high cytotoxicity, alpha particles should be preferred to beta particles and X-rays to overcome radiation resistance. However, clinical studies showed that TAT might be efficient also in quite large tumors, and biological effects have been observed also away from irradiated cells. These distant effects are called bystander effects when occurring at short distance (<1 mm), and systemic effects when occurring at much longer distance. Systemic effects implicate the immune system. These findings showed that cells can die without receiving any radiation dose, and that a more complex and integrated view of radiobiology is required. This includes the notion that the direct, bystander and systemic responses cannot be dissociated because DNA damage is intimately linked to bystander effects and immune response. Here, we provide a brief overview of the paradigms that need to be revisited.

Highlights

  • Targeted alpha therapy (TAT), based on alpha particle-emitting radionuclides, has become popular in the last decades after the approval of Xofigo (223RaCl2) and the encouraging results obtained for several radiopharmaceuticals under investigation

  • In 1992, Nagasawa and Little were the first to show the involvement of bystander effects in alpha particle irradiation in CHO cells irradiated with low fluences of alpha particles produced by 238Pu [57]

  • The new concepts of TAT radiobiology described in the previous chapters and represented in Figures 1, 2 have several consequences

Read more

Summary

Revisiting the Radiobiology of Targeted Alpha Therapy

Institut de Recherche en Cancérologie de Montpellier (IRCM), Inserm U1194, Université de Montpellier, Institut Régional du Cancer de Montpellier (ICM), Montpellier, France. Reviewed by: Roger Schibli, Paul Scherrer Institut (PSI), Switzerland Ekaterina Dadachova, University of Saskatchewan, Canada. Specialty section: This article was submitted to Nuclear Medicine, a section of the journal

Frontiers in Medicine
INTRODUCTION
THE TARGET CELL PARADIGM
FROM PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL EVENTS TO DNA DAMAGE
ALPHA IRRADIATION OF THE CELL MEMBRANE
AND MITOCHONDRIA
BYSTANDER IMMUNITY AND ABSCOPAL EFFECTS
Findings
CONSEQUENCES OF NEW PARADIGMS FOR TAT RADIOBIOLOGY
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call