Baechler Sébastien, Hobbs Robert F, Prideaux Andrew R, Wahl Richard L, Sgouros George
Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Sciences, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21231, USA.
Med Phys. 2008 Mar;35(3):1123-34. doi: 10.1118/1.2836421.
In dosimetry-based treatment planning protocols, patients with rapid clearance of the radiopharmaceutical require a larger amount of initial activity than those with slow clearance to match the absorbed dose to the critical organ. As a result, the dose-rate to the critical organ is higher in patients with rapid clearance and may cause unexpected toxicity compared to patients with slow clearance. In order to account for the biological impact of different dose-rates, radiobiological modeling is beginning to be applied to the analysis of radionuclide therapy patient data. To date, the formalism used for these analyses is based on kinetics derived from activity in a single organ, the target. This does not include the influence of other source organs to the dose and dose-rate to the target organ. As a result, only self-dose irradiation in the target organ contributes to the dose-rate. In this work, the biological effective dose (BED) formalism has been extended to include the effect of multiple source organ contributions to the net dose-rate in a target organ. The generalized BED derivation has been based on the Medical Internal Radionuclide Dose Committee (MIRD) schema assuming multiple source organs following exponential effective clearance of the radionuclide. A BED-based approach to determine the largest safe dose to critical organs has also been developed. The extended BED formalism is applied to red marrow dosimetry, as well as kidney dosimetry considering the cortex and the medulla separately, since both those organs are commonly dose limiting in radionuclide therapy. The analysis shows that because the red marrow is an early responding tissue (high alpha/beta), it is less susceptible to unexpected toxicity arising from rapid clearance of high levels of administered activity in the marrow or in the remainder of the body. In kidney dosimetry, the study demonstrates a complex interplay between clearance of activity in the cortex and the medulla, as well as the initial activity ratio and the S value ratio between the two. In some scenarios, projected BED based on both the cortex and the medulla is a more appropriate constraint on the administered activity than the BED based on the cortex only. Furthermore, different fractionated regimens were considered to reduce renal toxicity. The MIRD-based BED formalism is expected to be useful for patient-specific adjustments of activity and to facilitate the investigation of dose-toxicity correlations with respect to dose-rate and tissue repair mechanism.
在基于剂量测定的治疗计划方案中,放射性药物清除速度快的患者比清除速度慢的患者需要更大的初始活度,以便使关键器官的吸收剂量相匹配。因此,放射性药物清除速度快的患者关键器官的剂量率更高,与清除速度慢的患者相比,可能会导致意外的毒性。为了考虑不同剂量率的生物学影响,放射生物学建模开始应用于放射性核素治疗患者数据的分析。迄今为止,用于这些分析的形式体系是基于从单个器官(靶器官)中的活度得出的动力学。这没有包括其他源器官对靶器官剂量和剂量率的影响。结果,只有靶器官中的自剂量照射对剂量率有贡献。在这项工作中,生物有效剂量(BED)形式体系已得到扩展,以包括多个源器官对靶器官净剂量率的贡献的影响。广义BED推导基于医学内照射剂量委员会(MIRD)模式,假设多个源器官遵循放射性核素的指数有效清除。还开发了一种基于BED的方法来确定关键器官的最大安全剂量。扩展的BED形式体系应用于红骨髓剂量测定,以及分别考虑皮质和髓质的肾脏剂量测定,因为这两个器官在放射性核素治疗中通常都是剂量限制器官。分析表明,由于红骨髓是早期反应组织(高α/β),它不太容易受到骨髓或身体其他部位高水平给药活度快速清除所引起的意外毒性的影响。在肾脏剂量测定中,该研究表明皮质和髓质中活度清除之间以及两者之间的初始活度比和S值比之间存在复杂的相互作用。在某些情况下,基于皮质和髓质的预计BED对给药活度的限制比仅基于皮质的BED更合适。此外,考虑了不同的分次方案以降低肾脏毒性。基于MIRD的BED形式体系预计将有助于针对患者进行活度调整,并便于研究与剂量率和组织修复机制相关的剂量-毒性相关性。