http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2010-07/uoc--isc072210.php
Patients with deadly glioblastomas who received high doses of radiation that hit a portion of
the brain that harbors neural stem cells had double the progression-free survival time as
patients who had lower doses or no radiation targeting the area, a study from the Radiation
Oncology Department at UCLA's Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center has found.
Patients who underwent high doses of radiation that hit the specific neural stem cell site,
known as the stem cell niche, experienced 15 months of progression-free survival, while patients
receiving lower or no doses to this region experienced 7.2 months of progression-free survival,
said Dr. Frank Pajonk, an associate professor of radiation oncology, a cancer center researcher
and senior author of the study.
Pajonk said the study, published today in the early online edition of the journal BMC Cancer,
could result in changes in the way radiation therapy is given to patients with these deadly
brain cancers.
"Our study found that if you irradiated a part of the brain that was not necessarily part
of the tumor the patients did better," Pajonk said. "We have been struggling for years
to come up with new combinations of drugs and targeted therapies that would improve survival for
patients with glioblastoma. It may be that by re-shaping our radiation techniques we can extend
survival for these patients."
The retrospective study focused on the cases of 55 adult patients with grade 3 or grade 4
glioblastomas who received radiation at UCLA between February 2003 and May 2009. Pajonk said a
prospective study is needed to confirm the results.
There is some evidence that many if not all cancers may spring from stem cells or progenitor
cells that normally repair damage to the body, but that somehow become mutated and transform
into cancer. In this case, Pajonk said the neural stem cell niche, called the periventricular
region of the brain, may also be harboring stem cells that have transformed into brain cancer
stem cells. However, the niche serves as a sort of safe harbor for the cancer stem cells,
keeping them away from the site of the tumor but able to re-grow it once it's removed and the
malignant areas of the brain have been treated.
Pajonk theorizes that the brain cancer stem cells in the patients whose niches were irradiated
with higher doses may have been damaged or eliminated, giving these patients more time before
their cancer recurred.
"This suggests that the neural stem cell niche in the brain may be harboring cancer stem
cells, thus providing novel therapy targets," the study states. "We hypothesize that
higher radiation doses to these niches improve patient survival by eradicating the cancer stem
cells."
Glioblastomas are the deadliest form of brain cancer. Surgery, chemotherapy and radiation are
not usually effective and life expectancy is about 12 to 18 months. New and more effective
treatments are needed to help this patient population, Pajonk said.
The radiation therapy could damage neural stem cells as well as the cancer stem cells, Pajonk
said, but those may be replaceable at some future date using induced pluripotent stem cells made
from the patient's own cells. The induced pluripotent stem cells, which like embryonic stem
cells can make every cell in the body, could be induced into becoming neural stem cells to
replace those damaged or eradicated by the radiation to the niche.
July 22, 2010 (EurekAlert)