背向效应
医学
放射治疗
免疫疗法
剂量分馏
肿瘤科
旁观者效应
免疫系统
内科学
免疫学
作者
Kobe Reynders,Tim Illidge,Shankar Siva,Joe Y. Chang,Dirk De Ruysscher
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.ctrv.2015.03.011
摘要
Background Recently, immunologic responses to localized irradiation are proposed as mediator of systemic effects after localized radiotherapy (called the abscopal effect). Here, we give an overview of both preclinical and clinical data about the abscopal effect in particular and link them with the immunogenic properties of radiotherapy. Methods We searched Medline and Embase with the search term “abscopal”, “(non-targeted irradiation) OR (non-targeted radiotherapy)” and “distant bystander” from 1960 until July, 2014. Only papers that cover radiotherapy in an oncological setting were selected and only if no concurrent cytotoxic treatment was given. Targeted immune therapy was allowed. Results Twenty-three case reports, one retrospective study and 13 preclinical papers were selected. Eleven preclinical papers used a combination of immune modification and radiotherapy to achieve abscopal effects. Patient age range (28–83 years) and radiation dose (median total dose 32 Gy) varied. Fractionation size ranged from 1.2 Gy to 26 Gy. Time to documented abscopal response ranged between less than one and 24 months, with a median reported time of 5 months. Once an abscopal response was achieved, a median time of 13 months went by before disease progression occurred or the reported follow-up ended (range 3–39 months). Conclusion Preclinical data points heavily toward a strong synergy between radiotherapy and immune treatments. Recent case reports already illustrate that such a systemic effect of radiotherapy is possible when enhanced by targeted immune treatments. However, several issues concerning dosage, timing, patient selection and toxicity need to be resolved before the abscopal effect can become clinically relevant.
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