[Radiation induced cutaneo muscular fibrosis (III):
major therapeutic efficacy of liposomal Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase]
[Article in French]
Lefaix JL, Delanian S, Leplat JJ, Tricaud Y,
Martin M, Hoffschir D, Daburon F, Baillet F.
Departement de pathologie et toxicologie experimentales,
CEN Saclay, Gif-sur-Yvette, France.
Sub cutaneous and muscular fibrosis are common
and irreversible late effect of radiation on normal tissues. An experiment was
designed to test the effectiveness of superoxide dismutase in reducing late
radiation injury. This study was performed in an experimental porcine model
of acute localized gamma irradiation simulating human accidental overexposure:
12 Large White pigs were irradiated on the thigh with a collimated gamma 192Ir
source, so that the dose was 160 Gy/skin (100%) and 40 Gy/2 cm depth (25%).
In this model, fibrosis appears in 4 to 5 months. The heterogeneous sclerotic
tissue is composed of stable fibrotic areas poorly cellularized and active areas
with a high density of myofibroblasts and inflammatory perifibrotic part. Lipsod
administration modalities were six intramuscular injections during 3 weeks (twice
weekly) either 10 mg/inj (five pigs) or of 100 mg/inj (five pigs). A methodic
evaluation by two examiners consisted of measurements being taken before and
after treatment: sum of the two largest perpendicular measurable dimensions,
cutaneous projected surface of palpated fibrotic block, ultrasound fibrosis
deepness and extrapolated volume. We conclude that Lipsod is the first drug
ever described that reduces radiation-induced fibrosis. Its efficacy in this
model was highly significant, with a regression higher than 40% in size and
70% in surface and volume, 12 weeks after the end of treatment. This response
was rapid, reproducible without dose-effect or toxicity in the limits studied.
This work confirms previously published results in humans.