Litcius/Paper detail

The importance of hypoxia in radiotherapy for the immune response, metastatic potential and FLASH-RT

Eui Jung Moon, Kristoffer Petersson, Monica M. Olcina

2021International Journal of Radiation Biology53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE: Hypoxia (low oxygen) is a common feature of solid tumors that has been intensely studied for more than six decades. Here we review the importance of hypoxia to radiotherapy with a particular focus on the contribution of hypoxia to immune responses, metastatic potential and FLASH radiotherapy, active areas of research by leading women in the field. CONCLUSION: Although hypoxia-driven metastasis and immunosuppression can negatively impact clinical outcome, understanding these processes can also provide tumor-specific vulnerabilities that may be therapeutically exploited. The different oxygen tensions present in tumors and normal tissues may underpin the beneficial FLASH sparing effect seen in normal tissue and represents a perfect example of advances in the field that can leverage tumor hypoxia to improve future radiotherapy treatments.

Topics & Concepts

Hypoxia (environmental)Immune systemRadiation therapyFlash (photography)MedicineCancer researchOncologyBiologyImmunologyInternal medicineChemistryOxygenArtVisual artsOrganic chemistryCancer, Hypoxia, and MetabolismRadiation Therapy and DosimetryNanoplatforms for cancer theranostics