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Most head and neck cancers that recur
locally after prior full-dose conventional radiation therapy respond
to Boron Neutron Capture Therapy suggests the recent Finnish study.
Dr. Heikki Joensuu, professor of radiotherapy and oncology at the
University of Helsinki, considers the results clinically significant
and very interesting: They open a new field for BNCT, since thus far
BNCT has been evaluated only in the treatment of some brain tumours. |
Most head-and-neck cancers that recur locally after prior full-dose
conventional radiation therapy respond to Boron Neutron Capture Therapy (BNCT).
These results were obtained in a Phase I/II study at the Helsinki
University Hospital, Finland. The scientific director of the research
program, professor Heikki Joensuu, University of Helsinki, considers the
results clinically significant and very interesting. They open a new field
for BNCT, since thus far BNCT has been evaluated only in the treatment of
some brain tumours.
The follow-up results of 12 patients diagnosed with cancer of the
head-and-neck and treated in a prospective clinical trial were reported in
the International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology & Physics (online
version available: www.redjournal.org).
All patients had cancer of the head-and-neck that had recurred locally
after surgery and conventional radiation therapy. Ten out of the 12
patients had substantial tumour shrinkage following BNCT, and in 7 cases
the tumour disappeared completely. Adverse effects of treatment were
moderate and resembled those of conventional radiation therapy.
The study has been expanded, and up to 30 subjects will now be allowed
to enter the study protocol.
Boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT) is a form of targeted radiation
treatment for cancer. It is still considered experimental. In this method
a boron-containing compound (boronophenylalanine) is first infused into a
peripheral vein, following which the compound accumulates in cancer
tissue. Cancer is subsequently irradiated with neutrons obtained from a
nuclear reactor, which causes boron atoms to split within the cancerous
tissue as a result from a boron neutron capture reaction. The resulting
smaller particles cause a large radiation effect within the tumour tissue,
which destroys cancer cells.
The technique allows targeting of a high dosage of radiation to the
tumour while allowing sparing of the adjacent normal tissues from the
highest doses of radiation. Boron-mediated targeting of radiation allows
treatment of patients who can no longer be treated with conventional
radiation therapy. BNCT is administered as single one-day treatment that
may be repeated.
The study was sponsored by Boneca Corporation, the spinoff company
operating on the medical campus of the Helsinki University and the
University Central Hospital (www.boneca.fi).
The treatments are carried out in collaboration with the Department of
Oncology, Helsinki University Central Hospital, at the BNCT facility
constructed at the VTT research nuclear reactor site located at Otaniemi,
Espoo. The neutron radiation used in the treatment is provided by VTT.
Boneca Corporation’s clinical research program includes also a phase
I/II study that evaluates BNCT in the treatment of primary glioblastoma (a
highly malignant brain tumour) and another clinical trial that assesses
safety and efficacy of BNCT in the treatment of glioblastomas and
anaplastic astrocytomas (a type of brain tumour) that have recurred after
conventional radiation therapy.
“Our plan is to investigate BNCT in the treatment of cancers located
elsewhere in the body that cannot be effectively managed by any known
treatment,” says professor Heikki Joensuu.
”The current treatment is a result of a long period of research, a
proof of academic expertise, and a model for effective collaboration
between Helsinki University Central Hospital, University of Helsinki, VTT
Technical Research Centre of Finland, and the company”, says Boneca
Corporation’s managing director Markku Pohjola.
Boneca Corporation is the only health care company focusing on BNCT in
the world. Over one hundred cancer patients have received BNCT at its
facilities.
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