AI Article Synopsis

  • Long-term cancer survivors who undergo pelvic irradiation may develop pelvic radiation disease, necessitating strategies to prevent or alleviate these late effects.
  • Advances in radiotherapy allow for targeted radiation that minimizes damage to normal tissues, particularly benefiting prostate cancer treatment with reduced complications.
  • Despite promising preclinical findings, no effective clinical options exist to prevent or treat pelvic radiation disease yet, highlighting the importance of developing pharmacologic mitigators that could improve quality of life for affected patients.

Article Abstract

A percentage of long-term cancer survivors who receive pelvic irradiation will develop treatment-related late effects, collectively termed pelvic radiation disease. Thus, there is a need to prevent or ameliorate treatment-related late effects in these patients. Modern radiotherapy methods can preferentially protect normal tissues from radiation toxicities to permit higher doses to targets. However, concerns about chronic small bowel toxicity, for example, still constrain the prescription dose. This provides strong rationale for considering adding pharmacologic mitigators. Implementation of modern targeted radiotherapy methods enables delivery of focused radiation to target volumes, while minimizing dose to normal tissues. In prostate cancer, these technical advances enabled safe radiation dose escalation and better local tumor control without increasing normal tissue complications. In other pelvic diseases, these new radiotherapy methods have not resulted in the low probability of normal tissue damage achieved with prostate radiotherapy. The persistence of toxicity provides rationale for pharmacologic mitigators. Several new agents could be readily tested in clinical trials because they are being or have been studied in human patients already. Although there are promising preclinical data supporting mitigators, no clinically proven options to treat or prevent pelvic radiation disease currently exist. This review highlights therapeutic options for prevention and/or treatment of pelvic radiation disease, using pharmacologic mitigators. Successful development of mitigators would reduce the number of survivors who suffer from these devastating consequences of pelvic radiotherapy. It is important to note that pharmacologic mitigators to ameliorate pelvic radiation disease may be applicable to other irradiated sites in which chronic toxicity impairs quality of life.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-19-2744DOI Listing

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