International Journal of Particle Therapy (Mar 2021)

18Oxygen Substituted Nucleosides Combined with Proton Beam Therapy: Therapeutic Transmutation In Vitro

  • Tyvin Rich, MD,
  • Dongfeng Pan, PhD,
  • Mahendra Chordia, PhD,
  • Cynthia Keppel, PhD,
  • David Beylin, MS,
  • Pavel Stepanov, MS,
  • Mira Jung, PhD,
  • Dalong Pang, PhD,
  • Scott Grindrod, PhD,
  • Anatoly Dritschilo, MD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.14338/IJPT-D-20-00036.1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 4
pp. 11 – 18

Abstract

Read online

Purpose: Proton therapy precisely delivers radiation to cancers to cause damaging strand breaks to cellular DNA, kill malignant cells, and stop tumor growth. Therapeutic protons also generate short-lived activated nuclei of carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen atoms in patients as a result of atomic transmutations that are imaged by positron emission tomography (PET). We hypothesized that the transition of 18Oto 18Fin an 18O-substituted nucleoside irradiated with therapeutic protons may result in the potential for combined diagnosis and treatment for cancer with proton therapy. Materials and Methods: Reported here is a feasibility study with a therapeutic proton beam used to irradiate H218O to a dose of 10 Gy produced by an 85 MeV pristine Bragg peak. PET imaging initiated >45 minutes later showed an 18F decay signal with T1/2 of ~111 minutes. Results: The 18Oto 18F transmutation effect on cell survival was tested by exposing SQ20B squamous carcinoma cells to physiologic 18O-thymidine concentrations of 5 μM for 48 hours followed by 1- to 9-Gy graded doses of proton radiation given 24 hours later. Survival analyses show radiation sensitization with a dose modification factor (DMF) of 1.2. Conclusions: These data support the idea of therapeutic transmutation in vitro as a biochemical consequence of proton activation of 18Oto 18F in substituted thymidine enabling proton radiation enhancement in a cancer cell. 18O-substituted molecules that incorporate into cancer targets may hold promise for improving the therapeutic window of protons and can be evaluated further for postproton therapy PET imaging.

Keywords