Hemibody irradiation (HBI), was widely studied in the 1970s and 1980s as a palliative modality for disseminated bone metastases. Today, it has nearly disappeared from contemporary oncology practice. This decline has been largely attributed to hematologic, pulmonary, and gastrointestinal toxicities observed with early techniques, as well as the advent of effective systemic therapies and bone-targeted radionuclides. Yet, in the present era, with advances in precision radiotherapy and immunotherapy, there is renewed reason to revisit the role of HBI—particularly in the broader context of “magna-field” irradiation, which includes half-body and total-body techniques, as an adjunct to systemic cancer care. A recent systematic review and meta-analysis involving over 1300 patients demonstrated that, approximately 80% of them achieved partial or complete pain relief following HBI, with nearly one-third achieving complete relief.1 These outcomes are consistent with those achieved with focal external beam radiotherapy and radionuclide therapy. Importantly, the review also highlighted that most historical trials had low methodological quality, underscoring the urgent need to reevaluate HBI using modern image-guided techniques and standardized outcome measures. With the advent of volumetric-modulated arc therapy (VMAT) and helical tomotherapy, the limitations that previously constrained HBI are no longer overwhelming. Conformal planning can minimize irradiation of normal marrow, lungs, bowel, and kidneys, thus reducing acute toxicities that once defined the technique.2,3 Retrospective studies using VMAT-based HBI demonstrate effective palliation (pain-relief) with reduced organ-at-risk doses, demonstrating the feasibility of delivering large-field irradiation with acceptable safety profiles.4 Such advancements prompt the question of whether HBI, updated with contemporary technology, could reemerge as a clinically viable and resource-efficient tool especially in multifocal skeletal metastatic disease treatment. The more provocative and perhaps transformative consideration, however, is the potential immunologic synergy between magna-field irradiation and immune checkpoint inhibitors. Radiotherapy has been known for a long time to significantly influence the tumor microenvironment. It can enhance antigen release, increase major histocompatibility complex expression, and facilitate dendritic cell priming. While stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) has received most attention for its capacity to elicit systemic “abscopal” effects, there is little reason to presume that focal high-dose therapy is the sole pathway to immunogenic modulation. Indeed, low-dose, large-field irradiation may provide an alternative, complementary mechanism by reprogramming of the immune environment across widespread metastatic compartments. Experimental data suggest that sublethal, low-dose irradiation can normalize aberrant vasculature, enhance T-cell trafficking, and reduce immunosuppressive myeloid populations.5,6 This leads to the possibility that ultra-low-dose HBI could serve as an immune adjuvant booster, amplifying the efficacy of systemic immunotherapy in patients with widespread skeletal disease. In such patients, focal SABR is impractical, and radionuclides may not trigger adequate immunologic priming. In contrast, carefully applied magna-field irradiation could potentially prepare large areas of metastatic bone marrow, enhancing systemic immune responses. Clinical trials that combine radiotherapy with immune checkpoint blockade have already demonstrated encouraging outcomes in oligometastatic settings.7,8 Yet, these trials have predominantly focused on focal high-dose regimens. The role of wide-field and low-dose irradiation in immune modulation remains largely unexplored. Given the bone marrow’s dual role as a frequent site of metastasis and a central immune organ, HBI represents a biologically compelling—though often overlooked—strategy for systemic immune conditioning. In high-resource settings, this concept warrants investigation using modern conformal techniques and integration with immune checkpoint inhibitors, where HBI may serve as an adjunct to enhance systemic immune responses rather than a stand-alone palliative intervention. These biological considerations exist alongside a parallel, pragmatic rationale for HBI in resource-limited settings. HBI represents a flexible platform whose relevance extends beyond technologically intensive environments. In low- and middle-income countries, where access to stereotactic radiotherapy, radionuclides, and immunotherapy remains limited, cobalt-based HBI continues to offer a pragmatic and effective means of palliation. Prospective studies from India and Africa have demonstrated that such approaches are feasible, cost-effective, and associated with meaningful pain relief and reduced opioid dependence.9,10 In these settings, modernization of HBI need not imply technological escalation alone, but rather thoughtful optimization of dose, field design, and patient selection within existing infrastructure. Taken together, these parallel considerations suggest that HBI deserves renewed evaluation not as a relic of historical radiotherapy, but as a versatile strategy with distinct biological and ethical implications across diverse health-care contexts. Future clinical investigations should therefore address three complementary questions: (1) whether conformal HBI can safely provide systemic palliation with acceptable toxicity; (2) whether integration of HBI with immune checkpoint inhibition enhances immune and survival outcomes in selected patients; and (3) whether standardized HBI protocols can improve access to effective palliation in resource-constrained settings without exacerbating global inequities. In conclusion, HBI, once sidelined due to toxicity and overshadowed by newer modalities, may yet find a renewed purpose at the intersection of palliative radiotherapy and immunotherapy. The time has come to reevaluate magna-field irradiation with modern technology, rigorous methodology, and an open-minded perspective toward its potential systemic benefits. Acknowledgement We acknowledge the utmost co-operation from our patient and hard work of the Physicist Team and fellow colleagues. Financial support and sponsorship Nil. Conflicts of interest There are no conflicts of interest.
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J. P. Agarwal
Tata Memorial Hospital
Janmenjoy Mondal
Bankura Sammilani Medical College
Tata Memorial Hospital
Medical College and Hospital, Kolkata
KPC Medical College and Hospital
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Agarwal et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a76076c6e9836116a2d3a5 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.4103/jcot.jcot_1_26
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