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The Metabolic Footprint of Systemic Effects in the Blood Caused by Radiotherapy and Inflammatory Conditions: A Systematic Review

Journal

METABOLITES
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/metabo13091000

Keywords

ionizing radiation; head and neck cancer; radiotherapy; inflammation; metabolomics; lipidomics

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This study aimed to compare the changes in metabolic patterns induced by radiation and inflammation at the systemic level. Metabolomics analysis of serum/plasma was conducted in patients receiving radiation therapy for head and neck cancer and patients with inflammation-related diseases in corresponding anatomical regions. The studies revealed different metabolic patterns of acute and chronic inflammatory diseases, with common features related to the urea cycle and metabolism of arginine and proline. Several common metabolic pathways affected by both radiation and inflammation were identified, including energy metabolism and metabolism of certain amino acids and lipids. However, metabolites common to radiation therapy and inflammation-related diseases may show opposite patterns of changes. Analyzing the dynamic metabolic changes during different phases of radiation response would contribute to a deeper understanding of the impact on biological systems.
Response to radiotherapy (RT) includes tissue toxicity, which may involve inflammatory reactions. We aimed to compare changes in metabolic patterns induced at the systemic level by radiation and inflammation itself. Patients treated with RT due to head and neck cancer and patients with inflammation-related diseases located in the corresponding anatomical regions were selected. PubMed and Web of Science databases were searched from 1 January 2000 to 10 August 2023. Twenty-five relevant studies where serum/plasma metabolic profiles were analyzed using different metabolomics approaches were identified. The studies showed different metabolic patterns of acute and chronic inflammatory diseases, yet changes in metabolites linked to the urea cycle and metabolism of arginine and proline were common features of both conditions. Although the reviewed reports showed only a few specific metabolites common for early RT response and inflammatory diseases, partly due to differences in metabolomics approaches, several common metabolic pathways linked to metabolites affected by radiation and inflammation were revealed. They included pathways involved in energy metabolism (e.g., metabolism of ketone bodies, mitochondrial electron transport chain, Warburg effect, citric acid cycle, urea cycle) and metabolism of certain amino acids (Arg, Pro, Gly, Ser, Met, Ala, Glu) and lipids (glycerolipids, branched-chain fatty acids). However, metabolites common for RT and inflammation-related diseases could show opposite patterns of changes. This could be exemplified by the lysophosphatidylcholine to phosphatidylcholine ratio (LPC/PC) that increased during chronic inflammation and decreased during the early phase of response to RT. One should be aware of dynamic metabolic changes during different phases of response to radiation, which involve increased levels of LPC in later phases. Hence, metabolomics studies that would address molecular features of both types of biological responses using comparable analytical and clinical approaches are needed to unravel the complexities of these phenomena, ultimately contributing to a deeper understanding of their impact on biological systems.

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