Publication:
Pulsed radiation therapy to improve systemic control of metastatic cancer

Thumbnail Image

Departments

Organizational Unit

School / College / Institute

Organizational Unit
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
Upper Org Unit

Program

KU-Authors

KU Authors

Co-Authors

He, Kewen
Barsoumian, Hampartsoum B.
Puebla-Osorio, Nahum
Hsu, Ethan Y.
Verma, Vivek
Abana, Chike O.
Chen, Dawei
Patel, Roshal R.
Gu, Meidi
Cortez, Maria Angelica

Publication Date

Language

Embargo Status

NO

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Alternative Title

Abstract

Radiation therapy (RT) is emerging as an interventional modality in the cancer-immunity cycle, augmenting the activation of an adaptive immune response against tumors. RT, particularly in combination with immunotherapy, can enhance immune memory effects and shape the tumor-directed T-cell populations. However, a single cycle of RT delivered to a limited number of polymetastatic lesions is rarely sufficient to achieve systemic control. We hypothesize that several rounds of RT, akin to several rounds of immunotherapeutic drugs, is likely to provide greater clinical benefit to patients with metastatic disease. We propose that the repeated exposure to tumor antigens released by ""pulsed-RT"" (i.e., treating 2-4 tumor lesions with 3 irradiation cycles given one month apart) may amplify the adaptive immune response by expanding the tumor-specific T-cell receptor repertoire, the production of high-affinity tumor antibodies, and the generation of memory lymphocytes and thereby improve immune control of systemic disease.</p>

Source

Publisher

Frontiers

Subject

Oncology

Citation

Has Part

Source

Frontiers in Oncology

Book Series Title

Edition

DOI

10.3389/fonc.2021.737425

item.page.datauri

Link

Rights

Copyrights Note

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

0

Views

4

Downloads

View PlumX Details