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Authors' Affiliations: 1 Department of Pathology and 2 Nuclear Engineering Program, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio; 3 Department of Nuclear Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts; and 4 Department of Chemistry, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Requests for reprints: Rolf F. Barth, M.D., Department of Pathology,The Ohio State University, 165 Hamilton Hall, 1645 Neil Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210. Phone: 614-292-2177; Fax: 614-292-7072; E-mail: barth.1{at}osu.edu.
| Abstract |
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particles and recoiling lithium-7 nuclei. Clinical interest in BNCT has focused primarily on the treatment of high-grade gliomas and either cutaneous primaries or cerebral metastases of melanoma, most recently, head and neck and liver cancer. Neutron sources for BNCT currently are limited to nuclear reactors and these are available in the United States, Japan, several European countries, and Argentina. Accelerators also can be used to produce epithermal neutrons and these are being developed in several countries, but none are currently being used for BNCT.
Boron Delivery Agents: Two boron drugs have been used clinically, sodium borocaptate (Na2B12H11SH) and a dihydroxyboryl derivative of phenylalanine called boronophenylalanine. The major challenge in the development of boron delivery agents has been the requirement for selective tumor targeting to achieve boron concentrations (
20 µg/g tumor) sufficient to deliver therapeutic doses of radiation to the tumor with minimal normal tissue toxicity. Over the past 20 years, other classes of boron-containing compounds have been designed and synthesized that include boron-containing amino acids, biochemical precursors of nucleic acids, DNA-binding molecules, and porphyrin derivatives. High molecular weight delivery agents include monoclonal antibodies and their fragments, which can recognize a tumor-associated epitope, such as epidermal growth factor, and liposomes. However, it is unlikely that any single agent will target all or even most of the tumor cells, and most likely, combinations of agents will be required and their delivery will have to be optimized.
Clinical Trials: Current or recently completed clinical trials have been carried out in Japan, Europe, and the United States. The vast majority of patients have had high-grade gliomas. Treatment has consisted first of "debulking" surgery to remove as much of the tumor as possible, followed by BNCT at varying times after surgery. Sodium borocaptate and boronophenylalanine administered i.v. have been used as the boron delivery agents. The best survival data from these studies are at least comparable with those obtained by current standard therapy for glioblastoma multiforme, and the safety of the procedure has been established.
Conclusions: Critical issues that must be addressed include the need for more selective and effective boron delivery agents, the development of methods to provide semiquantitative estimates of tumor boron content before treatment, improvements in clinical implementation of BNCT, and a need for randomized clinical trials with an unequivocal demonstration of therapeutic efficacy. If these issues are adequately addressed, then BNCT could move forward as a treatment modality.
Key Words: Boron neutron capture therapy gliomas melanoma head and neck cancer
In theory, boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT) provides a way to selectively destroy malignant cells and spare normal cells. It is based on the nuclear capture and fission reactions that occur when boron-10 (10B), which is a nonradioactive constituent of natural elemental boron, is irradiated with low-energy thermal neutrons to yield high linear energy transfer (LET)
particles (4He) and recoiling lithium-7 (7Li) nuclei:
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In order for BNCT to be successful, a sufficient amount of 10B must be selectively delivered to the tumor (
20 µg/g or
109 atoms/cell), and enough thermal neutrons must be absorbed by them to sustain a lethal 10B(n,
)7Li capture reaction. Because the high LET particles have limited path lengths in tissue (5-9 µm), the destructive effects of these high-energy particles is limited to boron containing cells. Clinical interest in BNCT has focused on the treatment of high-grade gliomas (15), and either cerebral metastases (16) or cutaneous primaries of melanoma (17). Most recently it has extended to head and neck and liver cancer. Since BNCT is a biologically rather than physically targeted type of radiation treatment, the potential exists to destroy tumor cells dispersed in the normal tissue parenchyma, if sufficient amounts of 10B and thermal neutrons are delivered to the target volume, the potential exists to destroy tumor cells dispersed in the normal tissue parenchyma. This review will cover radiobiological considerations on which BNCT is based, boron agents and optimization of their delivery, neutron sources, which at this time are exclusively nuclear reactors, past and ongoing clinical studies, and critical issues that must be addressed if BNCT is to be successful. Readers interested in more in-depth coverage of these and other topics related to BNCT are referred to several recent reviews and monographs (15, 1821).
| Radiobiological Considerations |
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rays, resulting primarily from the capture of thermal neutrons by normal tissue hydrogen atoms [1H(n,
)2H]; (b) high LET protons, produced by the scattering of fast neutrons and from the capture of thermal neutrons by nitrogen atoms [14N(n,p)14C]; and (c) high LET, heavier-charged
particles (stripped-down 4He nuclei) and 7Li ions, released as products of the thermal neutron capture and fission reactions with 10B [10B(n,
)7Li]. The greater density of ionizations along tracks of high LET particles results in an increased biological effect compared with the same physical dose of low LET radiation. Usually, this is called relative biological effectiveness (RBE), which is the ratio of the absorbed dose of a reference source of radiation (e.g., X-rays) to that of the test radiation that produces the same biological effect. Because both tumor and surrounding normal tissues are present in the radiation field, there will be an unavoidable, nonspecific background dose, consisting of both high and low LET radiation even with an ideal epithermal neutron beam. However, a greater concentration of 10B in the tumor will result in it receiving a higher total dose than that of adjacent normal tissues. This is the basis for the therapeutic gain in BNCT. As reviewed recently by one of us (18), the total radiation dose delivered to any tissue can be expressed in photon equivalent units as the sum of each of the high LET dose components multiplied by weighting factors, which depend on the increased radiobiological effectiveness of each of these components.
Biological effectiveness factors. The dependence of the biological effect on the microdistribution of 10B requires the use of a more appropriate term than RBE to define the biological effects of the 10B(n,
)7Li reaction. Measured biological effectiveness factors for the components of the dose from this reaction have been termed compound biological effectiveness (CBE) factors and are drug dependent (2123). The mode and route of drug administration, the boron distribution within the tumor, normal tissues, and even more specifically within cells, and even the size of the nucleus within the target cell population all can influence the experimental determination of the CBE factor. CBE factors, therefore, are fundamentally different from the classically defined RBE, which primarily is dependent on the quality (i.e., LET) of the radiation administered. CBE factors are strongly influenced by the distribution of the specific boron delivery agent and can differ substantially, although they all describe the combined effects of
particles and 7Li ions. The CBE factors for the boron component of the dose are specific for both the 10B delivery agent and the tissue. A weighted Gy unit [Gy(w)] has been used to express the summation of all BNCT dose components and indicates that the appropriate RBE and CBE factors have been applied to the high LET dose components. However, for clinical BNCT, the overall calculation of photon equivalent [Gy(w)] doses requires several assumptions about RBEs, CBE factors, and the boron concentrations in various tissues, based on currently available human or experimental data (24, 25).
Clinical dosimetry. The following biological weighting factors, summarized in Table 1, have been used in all of the recent clinical trials in patients with high-grade glioma using boronophenylalanine (BPA) in combination with an epithermal neutron beam. The 10B(n,
)7Li component of the radiation dose to the scalp has been based on the measured boron concentration in the blood at the time of BNCT, assuming a blood/scalp boron concentration ratio of 1.5:1 (2628) and a CBE factor for BPA in skin of 2.5 (26). A RBE of 3.2 has been used in all tissues for the high LET components of the beam: protons resulting from the capture reaction with nitrogen and recoil protons resulting from the collision of fast neutrons with hydrogen (2729). It must be emphasized that in order to use the experimentally derived values for estimation of Gy(w) doses in clinical radiations, the tissue distribution of the boron delivery agent in humans should be similar to that in the experimental animal model.X
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| Boron Delivery Agents |
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50 years ago and is an ongoing and difficult task of the highest priority. The most important requirements for a successful boron delivery agent are as follows: (a) low systemic toxicity and normal tissue uptake with high tumor uptake and concomitantly high tumor/brain and tumor/blood concentration ratios (>3-4:1); (b) tumor concentrations of
20 µg 10B/g tumor; (c) rapid clearance from blood and normal tissues and persistence in tumor during BNCT. However, it should be noted that at this time no single boron delivery agent fulfills all of these criteria. With the development of new chemical synthetic techniques and increased knowledge of the biological and biochemical requirements needed for an effective agent and their modes of delivery, several promising new boron agents have emerged (see examples in Fig. 1). The major challenge in their development has been the requirement for selective tumor targeting to achieve boron concentrations sufficient to deliver therapeutic doses of radiation to the tumor with minimal normal tissue toxicity. The selective destruction of glioblastoma multiforme cells in the presence of normal cells represents an even greater challenge compared with malignancies at other anatomic sites, because high-grade gliomas are highly infiltrative of normal brain, histologically complex, and heterogeneous in their cellular composition.
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Third-generation boron delivery agents. So-called third-generation compounds mainly consist of a stable boron group or cluster attached via a hydrolytically stable linkage to a tumor-targeting moiety, such as low molecular weight biomolecules or monoclonal antibodies (mAb). For example, the targeting of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor (EGFR) and its mutant isoform EGFRvIII, which are overexpressed in gliomas as well as in squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck, also has been one such approach (42). Usually, the low molecular weight biomolecules have been shown to have selective targeting properties and many are at various stages of development for cancer chemotherapy, photodynamic therapy, or antiviral therapy. The tumor cell nucleus and DNA are especially attractive targets because the amount of boron required to produce a lethal effect may be substantially reduced if it is localized within or near the nucleus (43). Other potential subcellular targets are mitochondria, lysosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, and Golgi apparatus. Water solubility is an important factor for a boron agent that is to be administered systemically, whereas lipophilicity is necessary for it to cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and diffuse within the brain and the tumor. Therefore, amphiphilic compounds possessing a suitable balance between hydrophilicity and lipophilicity have been of primary interest because they should provide the most favorable differential boron concentrations between tumor and normal brain, thereby enhancing tumor specificity. However, for low molecular weight molecules that target specific biological transport systems and/or are incorporated into a delivery vehicle, such as liposomes, the amphiphilic character is not as crucial. The molecular weight of the boron-containing delivery agent also is an important factor, because it determines the rate of diffusion within both the brain and the tumor.
| Low Molecular Weight Agents |
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Biochemical precursors and DNA-binding agents. Several boron-containing analogues of the biochemical precursors of nucleic acids, including purines, pyrimidines, nucleosides, and nucleotides, have been synthesized and evaluated in cellular and animal studies (5558). Some of these compounds, such as ß-5-o-carboranyl-2'-deoxyuridine (compound 4) and the 3-(dihydroxypropyl-carboranyl-pentyl)thymidine derivative N5-2OH (compound 5), have shown low toxicities, selective tumor cell uptake, and significant rates of phosphorylation into the corresponding nucleotides (59, 60). Intracellular nucleotide formation potentially can lead to enhanced tumor uptake and retention of these types of compounds (59).
Another class of low molecular weight delivery agents are boron-containing DNA-binding molecules, such as alkylating agents, intercalators, groove binders, and polyamines. Some examples are derivatives of aziridines, acridines, phenanthridines, trimethoxyindoles (compound 6), carboranylpolyamines, Pt(II)-amine complexes, dibenzimidazoles, and tribenzimidazoles (6164). A limitation of boron-containing polyamines is their frequently observed in vitro and in vivo toxicity, although promising derivatives with low cytotoxicity have been synthesized recently (6568). Other nuclear-targeting molecules are nido-carboranyl oligomeric phosphate diesters. Despite their multiple negative charges, oligomeric phosphate diesters have been shown to target the nuclei of TC7 cells following microinjection (69), suggesting that the combination of oligomeric phosphate diesters with a cell-targeting molecule capable of crossing the plasma membrane could provide both selectivity and nuclear binding. Such a conjugate recently has been designed and synthesized (70), although its biological evaluation has yet to be reported.
Boron-containing porphyrins and related structures. Several boron-containing fluorescent dyes, including acridines, phenanthridines, porphyrins, and phthalocyanine derivatives, have been synthesized and evaluated (7173). These have the advantage of being easily detected and quantified by fluorescence microscopy and have the potential for interacting with DNA due to their planar aromatic structures. Among these macrocycles, boron-containing porphyrins [e.g., H2DCP (compound 7)] have attracted special attention due to their low systemic toxicity compared with other dyes, easy synthesis with high boron content, and their remarkable stability (7477). Porphyrin derivatives have been synthesized that contain up to 44% boron by weight by way of closo-carborane or nido-carborane clusters linked to the porphyrin macrocycle via ester, amide, ether, methylene, or aromatic linkages (7173). The nature of these linkages is believed to influence their stability and systemic toxicity. Boron-containing porphyrins have excellent tumor-localizing properties (7178) and have been proposed for dual application as boron delivery agents and photosensitizers for photodynamic therapy (7981) of brain tumors. Despite the bulkiness of the carborane cages, carboranylporphyrins have been shown to interact with DNA and thereby produce in vitro DNA damage following light activation (82, 83). A few boronated phthalocyanines also have been synthesized, although these compounds usually have had decreased water solubility and an increased tendency to aggregate compared with the corresponding porphyrins (71, 72, 78). Boron-containing acridine molecules also have been reported to selectively deliver boron to tumors with high tumor/brain and tumor/blood ratios, whereas phenanthridine derivatives were found to have poor specificity for tumor cells (8486).
Other low molecular weight boron delivery agents. Carbohydrate derivatives of BSH and other boron-containing glucose, mannose, ribose, gulose, fucose, galactose, maltose (compound 8), and lactose molecules have been synthesized and some of these compounds have been evaluated in both in vitro and in vivo studies (8793). These compounds usually are highly water soluble, and as a possible consequence of this, they have shown both low toxicity and uptake in tumor cells. It has been suggested that their hydrophilic low molecular weight derivatives have poor ability to cross tumor cell membranes. However, they might selectively accumulate within the glycerophospholipid membrane bilayer and in other areas of the tumor, such as the vasculature.
Low molecular weight boron-containing receptor-binding molecules have been designed and synthesized. These have been mainly steroid hormone antagonists, such as derivatives of tamoxifen, 17ß-estradiol, cholesterol, and retinoic acid (9498). The biological properties of these agents depend on the density of the targeted receptor sites, although to date very little biological data have been reported. Other low molecular weight boron-containing compounds under development include phosphates, phosphonates (compound 9), phenylureas, thioureas, nitroimidazoles, amines, benzamides, isocyanates, nicotinamides, azulenes, and dequalinium derivatives (dequalinium-B, compound 10; refs. 40, 99101). The use of multiple boron delivery agents is probably essential for targeting of different subpopulations of tumor cells and subcellular sites. Furthermore, lower doses of each individual drug would be needed, which could reduce systemic toxicity while at the same time enhance tumor boron levels to achieve a therapeutic effect.
| High Molecular Weight Agents |
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Recent work of one of us (R.F.B.) has focused on the use of a chimeric mAb, cetuximab (IMC-C225, also known as Erbitux), produced by ImClone Systems, Inc., (New York, NY). This antibody recognizes both wild-type EGFR and its mutant isoform, EGFRvIII (116), and has been approved for clinical use by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of EGFR-positive recurrent colon cancer (117). Using previously developed methodology (102), a precision macromolecule, a polyamido amino (PAMAM or "starburst") dendrimer, has been heavily boronated and then linked by means of heterobifunctional reagents to EGF (109), cetuximab (106), or another mAb, L8A4, which is specifically directed against EGFRvIII (118). To completely bypass the BBB, the bioconjugates were administered by either direct i.t. injection (119) or convection enhanced delivery (120) to rats bearing i.c. implants of the F98 glioma that had been genetically engineered to express either wild-type EGFR (119) or EGFRvIII (121). Administration by either of these methods resulted in tumor boron concentrations that were in the therapeutic range (i.e.,
20 µg/g wet weight tumor). Similar data also were obtained using boronated EGF, and based on the favorable uptake of these bioconjugates, therapy studies were initiated at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology reactor (MITR). The mean survival times (MST) of animals that received either boronated cetuximab (122) or EGF (123) were significantly prolonged compared with those of animals bearing receptor-negative tumors. A further improvement in MSTs was seen if the animals received BPA, administered i.v. in combination with the boronated bioconjugates, thereby validating our thesis that combinations of agents may be superior to any single agent (31). As can be seen from the preceding discussion, the design and synthesis of low and high molecular weight boron agents have been the subject of intensive investigation. However, optimization of their delivery has not received enough attention but nevertheless is of critical importance.
| Optimizing Delivery of Boron-Containing Agents |
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Intra-arterial administration with or without blood-brain barrier disruption. As shown in experimental animal studies (30, 31, 124126), enhancing the delivery of BPA and BSH can have a dramatic effect on both increasing tumor boron uptake and the efficacy of BNCT. This has been shown in the F98 rat glioma model where i.c. injection of either BPA or BSH doubled the tumor boron uptake compared with that obtained by i.v. injection (30). This was increased 4-fold by disrupting the BBB by infusing a hyperosmotic (25%) solution of mannitol via the internal carotid artery. MSTs of animals that received either BPA or BSH i.c. with BBB-D were increased 295% and 117%, respectively, compared with irradiated controls (30). The best survival data were obtained using both BPA and BSH in combination administered by i.c. injection with BBB-D. The MST was 140 days with a cure rate of 25% compared with 41 days following i.v. injection with no long-term surviving animals (31). Similar data have been obtained using a rat model for melanoma metastatic to the brain. BPA was administered i.c. to nude rats bearing i.c. implants of the human MRA 27 melanoma with or without BBB-D. The MSTs were 104 to 115 days with 30% long-term survivors compared with a MST of 42 days following i.v. administration (124). A similar enhancement in tumor boron uptake and survival was observed in F98 glioma-bearing rats following i.c. infusion of the bradykinin agonist, receptor-mediated permeabilizer-7, now called Cereport (125). In contrast to the increased tumor uptake, normal brain boron values at 2.5 hours following i.c. injection were very similar for the i.v. and i.c. routes with or without BBB-D. Because BNCT is a binary system, normal brain boron levels only are of significance at the time of irradiation and high values at earlier time points are inconsequential. These studies have shown that a significant therapeutic gain can be achieved by optimizing boron drug delivery, and this should be important for both ongoing and future clinical trials using BPA and/or BSH.
Direct intracranial delivery. Different strategies may be required for other low molecular weight boron-containing compounds whose uptake is cell cycle dependent, such as boron-containing nucleosides, where continuous administration over a period of days may be required. We have reported recently that direct i.t. injection or convection enhanced delivery of the borononucleoside N5-2OH (compound 5) were both effective in selectively delivering potentially therapeutic amounts of boron to rats bearing i.c. implants of the F98 glioma (60). Direct i.t. injection or convection enhanced delivery most likely will be necessary for a variety of high molecular weight delivery agents, such as boronated mAbs (126), and ligands, such as EGF (120), as well as for low molecular weight agents, such as nucleosides and porphyrins. Recent studies have shown that convection enhanced delivery of a boronated porphyrin derivative similar to compound 7, designated H2DCP, resulted in the highest tumor boron values and tumor/brain and tumor/blood ratios that we have seen with any of the boron agents that we have ever studied (127).
| Neutron Sources for Boron Neutron Capture Therapy |
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)7Li capture reaction. However, because they have a limited depth of penetration, epithermal neutrons, which lose energy and fall into the thermal range as they penetrate tissues, are now preferred for clinical therapy. Several reactors with very good neutron beam quality have been developed and currently are being used clinically. These include (a) MITR, shown schematically in Fig. 2 (129); (b) the clinical reactor at Studsvik Medical AB in Sweden (130); (c) the FiR1 clinical reactor in Helsinki, Finland (131); (d) R2-0 High Flux Reactor at Petten in the Netherlands (132); (e) LVR-15 reactor at the Nuclear Research Institute in Rez, Czech Republic (133); (f) Kyoto University Research reactor in Kumatori, Japan (134); (g) JRR4 at the Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute (135); and (h) the RA-6 CNEA reactor in Bariloche, Argentina (136). Other reactor facilities are being designed, notably the TAPIRO reactor at the ENEA Casaccia Center near Rome, Italy, which is unique in that it will be a low-power fast-flux reactor (137), and facilities in South Korea and Beijing, China. Two reactors that have been used in the past for clinical BNCT are the Musashi Institute of Technology reactor in Japan and the Brookhaven Medical Research reactor at the Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) in Upton, Long Island, NY (27, 28, 138). The Musashi Institute of Technology was used by Hatanaka (139) and later by Hatanaka and Nakagawa (140). The Brookhaven Medical Research reactor was used for the clinical trial that was conducted at the BNL between 1994 and 1999 (141) and the results are described in detail later in this section. Due to a variety of reasons, including the cost of maintaining the Brookhaven Medical Research reactor, it has been deactivated and is no longer available for use.
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Accelerators. Accelerators also can be used to produce epithermal neutrons and accelerator-based neutron sources (ABNS) are being developed in several countries (144150), and interested readers are referred to a recently published detailed review on this subject (151). For ABNS, one of the more promising nuclear reactions involves bombarding a 7Li target with 2.5 MeV protons. The average energy of the neutrons that are produced is 0.4 MeV and the maximum energy is 0.8 MeV. Reactor-derived fission neutrons have greater average and maximum energies than those resulting from the 7Li(p,n)7Be reaction. Consequently, the thickness of the moderator material that is necessary to reduce the energy of the neutrons from the fast to the epithermal range is less for an ABNS than it is for a reactor. This is important because the probability that a neutron will be successfully transported from the entrance of the moderator assembly to the treatment port decreases as the moderator assembly thickness increases. Due to lower and less widely distributed neutron source energies, ABNS potentially can produce neutron beams with an energy distribution that is equal to or better than that of a reactor. However, reactor-derived neutrons can be well collimated, while in contrast it may not be possible to achieve good collimation of ABNS neutrons at reasonable proton beam currents. The necessity of good collimation for the effective treatment of glioblastoma multiforme is an important and unresolved issue that may affect usefulness of ABNS for BNCT. ABNS also are compact enough to be sited in hospitals, thereby allowing for more effective but technically more complicated procedures to carry out BNCT. However, to date, no accelerator has been constructed with a beam quality comparable with that of the MITR, which can be sited in a hospital and that provides a current of sufficient magnitude to treat patients in <30 minutes. Furthermore, issues relating to target manufacture and cooling must be solved before ABNS can become a reality. Although progress has been slow the ABNS that is being developed at the University of Birmingham in England, by modifying a Dynamitron linear electrostatic accelerator (144), may be the first facility where patients will be treated. Another ABNS is being constructed by LINAC Systems, Inc., in Albuquerque, NM (152), and this could be easily sited in a hospital and produce an epithermal neutron beam.
Beam optimization. For both reactors and ABNS, a moderator assembly is necessary to reduce the energy of the neutrons to the epithermal range. The neutrons comprising the neutron beam have a distribution of energies and are accompanied by unwanted X-rays and
photons. A basic tenet of BNCT is that the dose of neutrons delivered to the target volume should not exceed the tolerance of normal tissues, and this applies to neutron beam design as well as to treatment planning (25). The implication of this for beam design is that the negative consequences of increased normal tissue damage for more energetic neutron beams at shallow depths outweigh the benefits of more deeply penetrating energetic neutrons. For fission reactors, the average energy of the neutrons produced is
2 MeV, but small numbers have energies as high as 10 MeV. There is generally a tradeoff between treatment time and the optimum beam for patient treatment in terms of the energy distribution of the neutrons and the contamination of the neutron beam with X-rays and
photons. Not surprisingly, reactors with the shortest treatment time (i.e., the highest normal tissue dose rate) operate at the highest power, because the number of neutrons that is produced per unit time is proportional to the power, measured in MW. Furthermore, high beam quality is most easily achieved using reactors with high power, because a larger fraction of the neutrons can be filtered as the neutrons traverse the moderator assembly without making the treatment time exceedingly long.
| Clinical Studies of Boron Neutron Capture Therapy for Brain Tumors |
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Japanese clinical trials. Clinical studies were resumed by Hatanaka in Japan in 1967 following a 2-year fellowship in Sweet's laboratory at the Massachusetts General Hospital using a thermal neutron beam and BSH, which had been developed as a boron delivery agent by Soloway at the Massachusetts General Hospital (37). In Hatanaka's procedure (139, 140), as much of the tumor as possible was surgically removed ("debulking"), and at some time thereafter, BSH (compound 2) was administered by a slow infusion, usually intra-arterially (139) but later i.v. (140). Twelve to 14 hours later, BNCT was carried out at one or another of several different nuclear reactors. Because thermal neutrons have a limited depth of penetration in tissue, this necessitated reflecting the skin and raising the bone flap to directly irradiate the exposed brain. This eliminated radiation damage to the scalp and permitted treatment of more deep-seated residual tumors. As the procedure evolved over time, a ping pong ball or silastic sphere was inserted into the resection cavity as a void space to improve neutron penetration into deeper regions of the tumor bed and adjacent brain (139, 140, 157, 158). This is a major difference between the procedure carried out by Hatanaka, Nakagawa, and other Japanese neurosurgeons and the BNCT protocols that have been carried out in the United States and Europe, which used epithermal neutron beams that have not required reflecting the scalp and raising the bone flap at the time of irradiation. This has made it difficult to directly compare the Japanese clinical results with those obtained elsewhere, and this has continued on until very recently when the Japanese started using epithermal neutron beams (32). Most recently, Miyatake et al. have initiated a clinical study using the combination of BSH and BPA, both of which were administered i.v. at 12 hours and 1 hour, respectively, before irradiation with an epithermal neutron beam (32). A series of 11 patients with high-grade gliomas have been treated, and irrespective of the initial tumor volume, magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography images showed a 17% to 51% reduction in tumor volume and this reached a maximum of 30% to 88%. However, the survival times of these patients were not improved over historical controls and further studies are planned to improve the delivery of BPA and BSH, which may enhance survival.
Analysis of the Japanese clinical results. Retrospective analysis of subgroups of patients treated in Japan by Hatanaka and Nakagawa (157, 158) have described 2-, 5-, and 10-year survival rates (11.4%, 10.4%, and 5.7%, respectively) that were significantly better than those observed among patients treated with conventional, fractionated, external beam photon therapy. However, a cautionary note was sounded by Laramore et al. (159) who analyzed the survival data of a subset of 12 patients from the United States who had been treated by Hatanaka between 1987 and 1994. They concluded that there were no differences in their survival times compared with those of age-matched controls, analyzed according to the stratification criteria used by Curran et al. (6). In a recent review of Hatanaka's clinical studies, Nakagawa reported that the physical dose from the 10B(n,
)7Li reaction, delivered to a target point 2 cm beyond the surgical margin, correlated with survival (158). For 66 patients with glioblastoma multiforme, those who survived <3 years (n = 60) had a minimum target point dose of 9.5 ± 5.9 Gy, whereas those who survived >3 years (n = 6) had a minimum target point dose of 15.6 ± 3.1 Gy from the 10B(n,
)7Li reaction (158). The boron concentrations in brain tissue at the target point, which are required to calculate the physical radiation dose attributable to the 10B(n,
)7Li capture reaction, were estimated to be 1.2 times that of the patient's blood boron concentration (160).
Other recent and ongoing clinical trials. Beginning in 1994, several clinical trials, summarized in Table 2, were initiated in the United States and Europe. These marked a transition from low-energy thermal neutron irradiation to the use of higher-energy epithermal neutron beams with improved tissue penetrating properties, which obviated the need to reflect skin and bone flaps before irradiation. Up until recently, the procedure carried out in Japan required neurosurgical intervention immediately before irradiation, whereas the current epithermal neutron-based clinical protocols are radiotherapeutic procedures, done several weeks after debulking surgery and without the need of this. Clinical trials for patients with brain tumors were initiated at several locations, including (a) the BMRR at BNL from 1994 to 1999 for glioblastoma multiforme using BPA with one or two neutron radiations, given on consecutive days (161163); (b) the MITR from 1996 to 1999 for glioblastoma multiforme and i.c. melanoma (164, 165); (c) the High Flux Reactor, Petten, the Netherlands, and the University of Essen in Germany in 1997 using BSH (166); (d) the FiR1 at the Helsinki University Central Hospital (131) in 1999 to the present; (e) the Studsvik Reactor Facility in Sweden from 2001 to the present, carried out by the Swedish National Neuro-Oncology Group (130); and (f) the Nuclear Research Institute reactor in Rez, Czech Republic, by Tovarys using BSH (167). The number of patients treated in this study is small and the follow-up is still rather short.
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Analysis of the Brookhaven and Massachusetts Institute of Technology clinical results. The BNL and Harvard/MIT studies have provided the most detailed data relating to normal brain tolerance following BNCT. A residual tumor volume of
60 cm3 led to a greater incidence of acute central nervous system toxicity. This primarily was related to increased i.c. pressure, resulting from tumor necrosis and the associated cerebral edema (141, 163, 165). The most frequently observed neurologic side effect associated with the higher radiation doses, other than the residual tumor volumerelated effects, was radiation-related somnolence (168). This is a well-recognized effect following whole-brain photon irradiation (169), especially in children with leukemia or lymphoma, who have received central nervous system irradiation. However, somnolence is not a very well-defined radiation-related end point because it frequently is diagnosed after tumor recurrence has been excluded. Therefore, it is not particularly well suited as a surrogate marker for normal tissue tolerance. In the dose escalation studies carried out at BNL (141, 163, 164), the occurrence of somnolence in the absence of a measurable tumor dose response was clinically taken as the maximum tolerated normal brain dose. The volume-averaged whole-brain dose and the incidence of somnolence increased significantly as the BNL and Harvard/MIT trials progressed. The volume of tissue irradiated is a determining factor in the development of side effects (169). Average whole-brain doses of >5.5 Gy(w) were associated with somnolence in the trial carried out at BNL but not in all of the patients in the Harvard/MIT study (18, 141, 164). The BNL and Harvard/MIT trials were completed in 1999. Both produced median and 1-year survival times that were comparable with conventional external beam photon therapy (6). Although both were primarily phase I trials to evaluate the safety of dose escalation as the primary end point for radiation-related toxicity, the secondary end points were quality of life and time to progression and overall survival. The median survival times for 53 patients from the BNL trial and the 18 glioblastoma multiforme patients from the Harvard/MIT trial were 13 and 12 months, respectively. Following recurrence, most patients received some form of salvage therapy, which may have further prolonged overall survival. Time to progression, which would eliminate salvage therapy as a confounding factor, probably would be a better indicator of the efficacy of BNCT, although absolute survival time still is the "gold standard" for any clinical trial. The quality of life for most of the BNL patients was very good, especially considering that treatment was given in one or two consecutive daily fraction(s).
Clinical trials carried out in Sweden and Finland. The clinical team at the Helsinki University Central Hospital and VTT (Technical Research Center of Finland) have reported on 18 patients using BPA as the capture agent (290 mg/kg infused over 2 hours) with two irradiation fields and whole-brain average doses in the range of 3 to 6 Gy(w) (131). The estimated 1-year survival was 61%, which was very similar to the BNL data. This trial is continuing and the dose of BPA has been escalated to 450 mg/kg and will be increased to 500 mg/kg, infused over 2 hours.5 Because BNCT can deliver a significant dose to tumor with a relatively low average brain dose, this group also has initiated a clinical trial for patients who have recurrent glioblastoma multiforme after having received full-dose photon therapy. In this protocol, at least 6 months must have elapsed from the end of photon therapy to the time of BNCT and the peak brain dose should be <8 Gy(w) and the whole-brain average dose <6 Gy(w). As of August 2004, only a few patients have been treated, but this has been well tolerated.
Investigators in Sweden have carried out a BPA-based trial using an epithermal neutron beam at the Studsvik Medical AB reactor (130). This study differed significantly from all previous clinical trials in that the total amount of BPA administered was increased to 900 mg/kg, infused i.v. over 6 hours. This approach was based on the following preclinical data: (a) the in vitro observation that several hours were required to fully load cells with BPA (170); (b) long-term i.v. infusions of BPA in rats increased the absolute tumor boron concentrations in the 9L gliosarcoma model, although the tumor/blood ratio remained constant (171, 172); and (c) most importantly, long-term i.v. infusions of BPA seemed to improve the uptake of boron in infiltrating tumor cells at some distance from the main tumor mass in rats bearing i.c. 9L gliosarcomas (173, 174). The longer infusion time of BPA has been well tolerated (130), and the preliminary median survival time for 17 patients from this trial was 18 months, which is significantly longer than the BNL or Harvard/MIT data. All patients were treated with two fields, and the average whole-brain dose was 3 to 6 Gy(w), which was lower than the higher end of the doses used in the Brookhaven trial, although the peak dose was <15 Gy(w), which was similar to that used at BNL. Because in Sweden patients with glioblastoma multiforme who have recurred are not subjected to aggressive salvage therapy,6 the survival data were not influenced by subsequent treatments, as was the case for the BNL and MIT patients, and therefore they more accurately represent the true effects of BNCT on the tumor. If the improved median survival time is firmly established, this would represent a significant advance because one BNCT treatment resulted not only in improved survival but also in a better quality of life.
| Clinical Studies of Boron Neutron Capture Therapy for Other Tumors |
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4 years following BNCT (180). Several patients with either cutaneous or cerebral metastases of melanoma have been treated by Busse et al. using BPA fructose as the delivery agent (18, 183). The most striking example of a favorable response was in a patient with an unresected cerebral metastasis in the occipital lobe. The tumor received a dose of 24 Gy(w) and monthly magnetic resonance imaging studies revealed complete regression over a 4-month interval (183). As demonstrated radiographically, a second patient with a brain metastasis had a partial response. Several other patients with either cutaneous or metastatic melanoma to the brain have been treated at other institutions, including the first in Argentina (184), and the consensus seems to be that these tumors are more responsive to BNCT than glioblastoma multiforme. This is supported by experimental studies carried out by two of us (R.F.B. and J.A.C.) using a human melanoma xenograft model (185, 186), which showed enhanced survival times and cure rates superior to those obtained using the F98 rat glioma model (187). In summary, multicentric metastatic brain tumors, and more specifically melanomas, which cannot be treated by either surgical excision or stereotactic radiosurgery, may be candidates for treatment by BNCT.
Other tumor types treated by boron neutron capture therapy. Two other types of cancer recently have been treated by BNCT. The first are recurrent tumors of the head and neck. Kato et al. have reported on a series of six patients, three of whom had squamous cell carcinomas, two had sarcomas, and one had a parotid tumor (188). All of them had received standard therapy and had developed recurrent tumors for which there were no other treatment options. All of the patients received a combination of BSH (5 g) and BPA (250 mg/kg body weight) administered i.v. In all but one patient, BNCT was carried out at the Kyoto University Research Reactor Institute using an epithermal neutron beam in one treatment that was given 12 hours following administration of BSH and 1 hour after BPA. The patient with the parotid tumor, who received a second treatment 1 month following the first, had the best response with a 63% reduction in tumor volume at 1 month and a 94% reduction at 1 year following the second treatment without evidence of recurrence. The remaining five patients showed responses ranging from a 10% to 27% reduction in tumor volume with an improvement in clinical status. This study has extended the use of BNCT to a group of cancers that frequently are ineffectively treated by surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy. However, further clinical studies are needed to objectively determine the clinical usefulness of BNCT for head and neck cancers, and another study currently is in progress at Helsinki University Central Hospital.7
The second type of tumor that recently has been treated by BNCT is adenocarcinoma of the colon that had metastasized to the liver (189). Although hepatectomy followed by allogeneic liver transplantation has been carried out at several centers (190, 191), Pinelli and Zonta et al. in Pavia, Italy, have approached the problem of multicentric hepatic metastases using an innovative but highly experimental procedure. Their patient had >14 metastatic nodules in the liver parenchyma, the size of which precluded surgical excision. Before hepatectomy was done, the patient received a 2-hour infusion of BPA fructose (300 mg/kg body weight) via the colic vein. Samples of tumor and normal liver were taken for boron determinations, and once it was shown that boron selectively had localized in the tumor nodules with small amounts in normal liver, the hepatectomy was completed (189). The liver then was transported to the Reactor Laboratory of the University of Pavia for neutron irradiation, following which it was reimplanted into the patient. More than 2 years later in October 2004, the patient had no clinical or radiographic evidence of recurrence and carcinoembryonic antigen levels were low (192). Although it is unlikely that this approach will have any significant clinical impact on the treatment of the very large number of patients who develop hepatic metastases from colon cancer, it nevertheless again provides proof of principle that BNCT can eradicate multicentric deposits of tumor in a solid organ. The Pavia group has plans to treat other patients with metastatic liver cancer and several other groups (193195) are exploring the possibility of treating patients with primary as well as metastatic tumors of the liver using this procedure.
| Critical Issues |
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20 µg/g) of boron to the tumor. Furthermore, their delivery must be optimized to improve both tumor uptake and cellular microdistribution, especially to different subpopulations of tumor cells (196). Several studies have shown that there is considerable patient-to-patient as well i.t. variability in the uptake of both BSH (197, 198) and BPA (162, 173, 174) in patients with brain tumors. At present, the dose and delivery of these drugs have yet to be optimized, but based on experimental animal data (30, 31, 33, 124, 172), improvement in dosing and delivery could have a significant impact on increasing tumor uptake and microdistribution. Second, because the radiation dosimetry for BNCT is based on the microdistribution of 10B (199), which is indeterminable on a real-time basis, methods are needed to provide semiquantitative estimates of the boron content in the residual tumor. Imahori et al. (200202) in Japan and Kabalka (203) in the United States have carried out imaging studies with 18F-labeled BPA and have used data obtained from these studies to determine whether a patient might be a suitable candidate for BNCT using BPA as the delivery agent. In the absence of real-time tumor boron uptake data, the dosimetry for BNCT is very problematic. This is evident from the discordance of estimated doses of radiation delivered to the tumor and the therapeutic response, which should have been greater than that which was seen if the tumor dose estimates were correct (141).
Third, there is a discrepancy between the theory behind BNCT, which is based on a very sophisticated concept of selective cellular and molecular targeting of high LET radiation, and the implementation of clinical protocols, which are based on very simple approaches to drug administration, dosimetry, and patient irradiation. This in part is due to the fact that BNCT has not been carried out in advanced medical settings with a highly multidisciplinary clinical team in attendance. At this time, BNCT has been totally dependent on nuclear reactors as neutron sources. These are a medically unfriendly environment and are located at sites at varying distances from tertiary care medical facilities, which has made it difficult to attract patients, and the highly specialized medical team that ideally should be involved in clinical BNCT. Therefore, there is an urgent need for either very compact medical reactors such as one under construction in Beijing, China or ABNS that could be easily sited at selected centers that treat many patients with brain tu