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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 May 15.
Published in final edited form as: Clin Cancer Res. 2020 Jun 17;26(22):5781–5790. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-20-0572

Table 1.

Gaps and work-in-progress

Topic Ongoing and future work Details and hypotheses
Broadening of cell lines Expand study of cell lines with germline mutations, with initial focus on lung cancer Lung cancer has a dual potential for immunotherapy and molecular-targeted therapies
Increase in spectrum of prostate cancer cell lines Prostate cancer often treated with primary radiation, so this will enable adaptive effects to be studied
Development of a platform to study the response to radiation in patient-derived xenografts, cell lines, and organoids, ideally from consecutive biopsies Personalized medicine will enable more accurate precision medicine
Target determination Identification of biomarkers of adaptation from an array of “omics” combined with proteomics or phosphor-proteomics Likely to help define specific targets, including non-coding RNAs, e.g. miRNA (69) as potential targets
Use of immunohistochemistry and profiling of subclones over different time points to study the proportion of cells that adapt, in addition to examining the cells that survive the post-exposure “drugging” Adaptations are likely to be heterogeneous, possibly transient, and tumor adaptation to drugs need to be determined
Timing and transition of adaptation Study additional tumor types and additional time points between the end of radiation and 2 months, as well as beyond 2 months There are at least 2 general adaptation points: 1) starts during therapy, within days, whereby MF produces more changes than SD; and 2) starts by 2 months or later and SD predominates. This time course needs to be better defined
Mechanism of adaptation Epigenetic adaptations Preliminary data suggest that there are epigenetic changes and, if so, when does this occur and for how long does it persist?
Ongoing in vivo studies to examine growth delay and related biological changes for radiation, drugs, and the combination Potential collaborations with laboratories studying charged particle therapy
Normal tissue changes Expansion of the whole-body and organ-specific radiation biomarkers Provide biomarkers for radiation biodosimetry and normal tissue adaptations from therapy
Pursuant to our study of endothelial changes (19) further study of radiation inducible endothelial changes from in vitro cultures, organ-on-a-chip and in vivo experiments Understand the role of endothelial damage in radiation injury. (This is supported in a number of laboratories by NIAIDa and BARDAb programs).
Clinical applicability Through collaboration, obtain clinical samples for normal tissue biomarkers with groups studying radiation biodosimetry Clinical samples are limited by underlying medical conditions, dose delivered, and volume of tissue irradiated
Investigate the use of “radiation as a drug,” as part of an overall approach from the “Shades of Gy” workshop (13) toward “accurate, precision radiation medicine” (14) Prospective intervention trials will depend on preclinical data. Some pre- and post-RT sampling may be done including pre- operative radiotherapy, intraoperative radiotherapy and brachytherapy
a

NIAID Radiation and Nuclear Countermeasures Program. Available at: https://www.niaid.nih.gov/research/radiation-nuclear-countermeasures-program. Accessed April 24, 2020

b

BARDA Radiological/nuclear medical countermeasures. Availalble at: https://www.medicalcountermeasures.gov/barda/cbrn/radiological-and-nuclear-countermeasures/ Accessed April 24, 2020