On the probability of cure for heavy-ion radiotherapy

Phys Med Biol. 2014 Jul 21;59(14):3829-42. doi: 10.1088/0031-9155/59/14/3829. Epub 2014 Jun 23.

Abstract

The probability of a cure in radiation therapy (RT)-viewed as the probability of eventual extinction of all cancer cells-is unobservable, and the only way to compute it is through modeling the dynamics of cancer cell population during and post-treatment. The conundrum at the heart of biophysical models aimed at such prospective calculations is the absence of information on the initial size of the subpopulation of clonogenic cancer cells (also called stem-like cancer cells), that largely determines the outcome of RT, both in an individual and population settings. Other relevant parameters (e.g. potential doubling time, cell loss factor and survival probability as a function of dose) are, at least in principle, amenable to empirical determination. In this article we demonstrate that, for heavy-ion RT, microdosimetric considerations (justifiably ignored in conventional RT) combined with an expression for the clone extinction probability obtained from a mechanistic model of radiation cell survival lead to useful upper bounds on the size of the pre-treatment population of clonogenic cancer cells as well as upper and lower bounds on the cure probability. The main practical impact of these limiting values is the ability to make predictions about the probability of a cure for a given population of patients treated to newer, still unexplored treatment modalities from the empirically determined probability of a cure for the same or similar population resulting from conventional low linear energy transfer (typically photon/electron) RT. We also propose that the current trend to deliver a lower total dose in a smaller number of fractions with larger-than-conventional doses per fraction has physical limits that must be understood before embarking on a particular treatment schedule.

MeSH terms

  • Cell Count
  • Cell Survival / radiation effects
  • Clone Cells / pathology
  • Clone Cells / radiation effects
  • Heavy Ion Radiotherapy*
  • Models, Biological
  • Neoplasms / pathology*
  • Neoplasms / radiotherapy*
  • Probability
  • Radiometry
  • Treatment Outcome