Public Health England, Centre for Radiation, Chemical and Environmental Hazards, Chilton, Didcot, Oxon OX11 0RQ, United Kingdom.
Radiat Res. 2013 Aug;180(2):149-55. doi: 10.1667/RR3238.1. Epub 2013 Jul 24.
The focus of the study is an intercomparison of laboratories' dose-assessment performances using the γ-H2AX foci assay as a diagnostic triage tool for rapid individual radiation dose assessment. Homogenously X-irradiated (240 kVp, 1 Gy/min) blood samples for establishing calibration data (0.25-4 Gy) as well as blinded test samples (0.1-6.4 Gy) were incubated at 37°C for 2 and 24 h (repair time) and sent to the participants. The foci assay was performed according to protocols individually established in participating laboratories and therefore varied. The time taken to report dose estimates was documented for each laboratory. Additional information concerning laboratory organization/characteristics as well as assay performance was collected. The mean absolute difference (MAD) of estimated doses relative to the actual doses was calculated and radiation doses were merged into four triage categories reflecting clinical relevance to calculate accuracy, sensitivity and specificity. First γ-H2AX based dose estimates were reported 7 h after sample receipt. Estimates were similarly accurate for 2 and 24 h repair times, providing scope for its use in the early phase of a radiation exposure incident. Equal accuracy was achieved by scoring 20, 30, 40 or 50 cells per sample. However, MAD values of 0.5-0.7 Gy and 1.3-1.7 Gy divided the data sets into two groups, driven mainly by the considerable differences in foci yields between calibration and blind samples. Foci yields also varied dramatically between laboratories, highlighting reproducibility issues as an important caveat of the foci assay. Nonetheless, foci counts could distinguish high- and low-dose samples in all data sets and binary dose categories of clinical significance could be discriminated with satisfactory accuracy (mean 84%, ±0.03 SEM). Overall, the results suggest that the γ-H2AX assay is a useful tool for rapidly screening individuals for significant exposures that occurred up to at least 24 h earlier, and may help to prioritize cytogenetic dosimetry follow-up.
这项研究的重点是使用 γ-H2AX 焦点测定法作为快速个体辐射剂量评估的诊断性分诊工具,对实验室的剂量评估性能进行相互比较。为了建立校准数据(0.25-4 Gy)以及进行盲样测试(0.1-6.4 Gy),将均匀辐照(240 kVp,1 Gy/min)的血液样本在 37°C 下孵育 2 小时和 24 小时(修复时间),然后将样本分发给参与者。γ-H2AX 焦点测定法是按照各参与实验室单独建立的方案进行的,因此存在差异。记录了每个实验室报告剂量估计值所花费的时间。还收集了有关实验室组织/特征以及测定性能的其他信息。计算了估计剂量与实际剂量的平均绝对差异(MAD),并将剂量合并为四个分诊类别,以反映对临床的相关性,从而计算准确性、敏感性和特异性。第一份基于 γ-H2AX 的剂量估计值在收到样本后 7 小时报告。对于 2 小时和 24 小时修复时间,剂量估计值同样准确,为其在辐射暴露事件的早期阶段的使用提供了可能。对每个样本评分 20、30、40 或 50 个细胞可实现相同的准确性。然而,0.5-0.7 Gy 和 1.3-1.7 Gy 的 MAD 值将数据集分为两组,主要是由于校准和盲样之间焦点产量的差异较大。焦点产量在实验室之间也有很大差异,突出了焦点测定法的可重复性问题。尽管如此,焦点计数仍可区分高剂量和低剂量样本,并且可以以令人满意的准确性(平均 84%,±0.03 SEM)区分具有临床意义的二进制剂量类别。总的来说,结果表明 γ-H2AX 测定法是一种有用的工具,可用于快速筛选个体是否发生了至少 24 小时前发生的重大暴露,并且可能有助于优先进行细胞遗传学剂量测定。