Radiat Oncol J.  2014 Sep;32(3):103-115. 10.3857/roj.2014.32.3.103.

Mechanisms of radiation-induced normal tissue toxicity and implications for future clinical trials

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Radiation Oncology, Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, MI, USA. jkim1@hfhs.org

Abstract

To summarize current knowledge regarding mechanisms of radiation-induced normal tissue injury and medical countermeasures available to reduce its severity. Advances in radiation delivery using megavoltage and intensity-modulated radiation therapy have permitted delivery of higher doses of radiation to well-defined tumor target tissues. Injury to critical normal tissues and organs, however, poses substantial risks in the curative treatment of cancers, especially when radiation is administered in combination with chemotherapy. The principal pathogenesis is initiated by depletion of tissue stem cells and progenitor cells and damage to vascular endothelial microvessels. Emerging concepts of radiation-induced normal tissue toxicity suggest that the recovery and repopulation of stromal stem cells remain chronically impaired by long-lived free radicals, reactive oxygen species, and pro-inflammatory cytokines/chemokines resulting in progressive damage after radiation exposure. Better understanding the mechanisms mediating interactions among excessive generation of reactive oxygen species, production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and activated macrophages, and role of bone marrow-derived progenitor and stem cells may provide novel insight on the pathogenesis of radiation-induced injury of tissues. Further understanding the molecular signaling pathways of cytokines and chemokines would reveal novel targets for protecting or mitigating radiation injury of tissues and organs.

Keyword

Radiation normal tissue injury; Protectors; Mitigators

MeSH Terms

Chemokines
Cytokines
Drug Therapy
Free Radicals
Macrophages
Microvessels
Negotiating
Radiation Injuries
Reactive Oxygen Species
Stem Cells
Chemokines
Cytokines
Free Radicals
Reactive Oxygen Species
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