Clock in radiation oncology clinics: cost-free modality to alleviate treatment-related toxicity

A large number of studies have reported that tumor cells are often out of sync with the surrounding healthy tissue. Exploiting this misalignment may be a way to obtain a substantial gain in the therapeutic window. Specifically, based on reports to date, we will assess whether radiotherapy outcomes d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer biology & therapy 2022-12, Vol.23 (1), p.201-210
Hauptverfasser: Ali, Yasser F., Hong, Zhiqiang, Liu, Ning-Ang, Zhou, Guangming
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container_title Cancer biology & therapy
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creator Ali, Yasser F.
Hong, Zhiqiang
Liu, Ning-Ang
Zhou, Guangming
description A large number of studies have reported that tumor cells are often out of sync with the surrounding healthy tissue. Exploiting this misalignment may be a way to obtain a substantial gain in the therapeutic window. Specifically, based on reports to date, we will assess whether radiotherapy outcomes differ depending on the administration time. Collectively, 24 studies met the inclusion criteria, out of which 12 at least reported that radiation therapy is less toxic when administered at a particular time, probably because there is less collateral damage to healthy cells. However, discrepancies exist across studies and urge further investigation. Mechanistic studies elucidating the relationship between radiotherapy, circadian rhythms, and cell cycle, combined with either our "digital" or "biological" chronodata, would help oncologists successfully chronotype individual patients and strategize treatment plans accordingly.
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source Taylor & Francis Open Access; MEDLINE; DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Cell Cycle
chronotherapy
Circadian Rhythm
Humans
Radiation Oncology
Radiotherapy
Review
survival
toxicity
title Clock in radiation oncology clinics: cost-free modality to alleviate treatment-related toxicity
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