Mass transport model of radiation response: Calibration and application to chemoradiation for pancreatic cancer Journal Article


Authors: Wang, C. X.; Elganainy, D.; Zaid, M. M.; Butner, J. D.; Agrawal, A.; Nizzero, S.; Minsky, B. D.; Holliday, E. B.; Taniguchi, C. M.; Smith, G. L.; Koong, A. C.; Herman, J. M.; Das, P.; Maitra, A.; Wang, H.; Wolff, R. A.; Katz, M. H. G.; Crane, C. H.; Cristini, V.; Koay, E. J.
Article Title: Mass transport model of radiation response: Calibration and application to chemoradiation for pancreatic cancer
Abstract: Purpose: The benefit of radiation therapy for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains unclear. We hypothesized that a new mechanistic mathematical model of chemotherapy and radiation response could predict clinical outcomes a priori, using a previously described baseline measurement of perfusion from computed tomography scans, normalized area under the enhancement curve (nAUC). Methods and Materials: We simplified an existing mass transport model that predicted cancer cell death by replacing previously unknown variables with averaged direct measurements from randomly selected pathologic sections of untreated PDAC. This allowed using nAUC as the sole model input to approximate tumor perfusion. We then compared the predicted cancer cell death to the actual cell death measured from corresponding resected tumors treated with neoadjuvant chemoradiation in a calibration cohort (n = 80) and prospective cohort (n = 25). After calibration, we applied the model to 2 separate cohorts for pathologic and clinical associations: targeted therapy cohort (n = 101), cetuximab/bevacizumab + radiosensitizing chemotherapy, and standard chemoradiation cohort (n = 81), radiosensitizing chemotherapy to 50.4 Gy in 28 fractions. Results: We established the relationship between pretreatment computed v nAUC to pathologically verified blood volume fraction of the tumor (r = 0.65; P =.009) and fractional tumor cell death (r = 0.97-0.99; P <.0001) in the calibration and prospective cohorts. On multivariate analyses, accounting for traditional covariates, nAUC independently associated with overall survival in all cohorts (mean hazard ratios, 0.14-0.31). Receiver operator characteristic analyses revealed discrimination of good and bad prognostic groups in the cohorts with area under the curve values of 0.64 to 0.71. Conclusions: This work presents a new mathematical modeling approach to predict clinical response from chemotherapy and radiation for PDAC. Our findings indicate that oxygen/drug diffusion strongly influences clinical responses and that nAUC is a potential tool to select patients with PDAC for radiation therapy. © 2022 The Author(s)
Keywords: chemotherapy; cell death; radiotherapy; calibration; pathology; radiation response; computerized tomography; tumors; clinical response; multivariant analysis; diseases; cancer cells; chemoradiotherapy; ductal adenocarcinomas; pancreatic cancers; chemo radiations; prospectives; mechanistics; mass transport model; normalized area
Journal Title: International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics
Volume: 114
Issue: 1
ISSN: 0360-3016
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2022-09-01
Start Page: 163
End Page: 172
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2022.04.044
PUBMED: 35643254
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC10042520
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 September 2022 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Christopher   Crane
    204 Crane