4.6 Article

Inhomogeneously distributed ferroptosis with a high peak-to-valley ratio may improve the antitumor immune response

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2023.1178681

Keywords

immunotherapy; ferroptosis; dose heterogeneity; modulated hyperthermia; nanoparticle; radiotherapy

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Combined radiotherapy and mild hyperthermia have been used clinically to improve local control, but long-lasting abscopal effects have not been commonly observed. A proposed hypothesis emphasizes the importance of the dose distribution peak-to-valley ratio within the tumor to induce immunogenic ferrroptosis while avoiding nonimmunogenic ferroptosis. To increase the peak-to-valley ratio, possible implications include using nanoparticles with conventional therapy, high modulation depth hyperthermia, or spatially fractionated radiotherapy.
Combined radiotherapy (RT) and mild hyperthermia have been used clinically for decades to increase local control. Both modalities tend to achieve a homogeneous dose distribution within treatment targets to induce immunogenic cell death. However, marked, and long-lasting abscopal effects have not usually been observed. We proposed a hypothesis to emphasize the importance of the peak-to-valley ratio of the dose distribution inside the tumor to induce immunogenic ferrroptosis in peak area while avoid nonimmunogenic ferroptosis in valley area. Although inhomogeneous distributed energy absorption has been noted in many anticancer medical fields, the idea of sedulously created dose inhomogeneity related to antitumor immunity has not been discussed. To scale up the peak-to-valley ratio, we proposed possible implications by the combination of nanoparticles (NP) with conventional RT or hyperthermia, or the use of a high modulation depth of extremely low frequency hyperthermia or high resolution spatially fractionated radiotherapy (SFRT) to enhance the antitumor immune reactions.

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