4.7 Article

Reverse-Contrast Imaging and Targeted Radiation Therapy of Advanced Pancreatic Cancer Models

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Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2015.06.001

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Funding

  1. US National Institutes of Health [P30 CA008748-48, S10 RR020892-01, S10 RR028889-01]
  2. Geoffrey Beene Cancer Research Center
  3. R25T Molecular Imaging Fellowship: Molecular Imaging Training in Oncology [5R25CA096945-07]
  4. Steve Wynn Prostate Cancer Foundation Young Investigator Award
  5. David H. Koch PCF YIA
  6. [R25-OD010447-02]

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Purpose: To evaluate the feasibility of delivering experimental radiation therapy to tumors in the mouse pancreas. Imaging and treatment were performed using combined CT (computed tomography)/orthovoltage treatment with a rotating gantry. Methods and Materials: After intraperitoneal administration of radiopaque iodinated contrast, abdominal organ delineation was performed by x-ray CT. With this technique we delineated the pancreas and both orthotopic xenografts and genetically engineered disease. Computed tomographic imaging was validated by comparison with magnetic resonance imaging. Therapeutic radiation was delivered via a 1-cm diameter field. Selective x-ray radiation therapy of the noninvasively defined orthotopic mass was confirmed using gamma H2AX staining. Mice could tolerate a dose of 15 Gy when the field was centered on the pancreas tail, and treatment was delivered as a continuous 360 degrees arc. This strategy was then used for radiation therapy planning for selective delivery of therapeutic x-ray radiation therapy to orthotopic tumors. Results: Tumor growth delay after 15 Gy was monitored, using CT and ultrasound to determine the tumor volume at various times after treatment. Our strategy enables the use of clinical radiation oncology approaches to treat experimental tumors in the pancreas of small animals for the first time. We demonstrate that delivery of 15 Gy from a rotating gantry minimizes background healthy tissue damage and significantly retards tumor growth. Conclusions: This advance permits evaluation of radiation planning and dosing parameters. Accurate noninvasive longitudinal imaging and monitoring of tumor progression and therapeutic response in preclinical models is now possible and can be expected to more effectively evaluate pancreatic cancer disease and therapeutic response. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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