Pradhan Kamnesh, Mund Julie, Case Jamie, Gupta Samir, Liu Ziyue, Gathirua-Mwangi Wambui, McDaniel Anna, Renbarger Jamie, Champion Victoria
Department of Pediatric Hematology-Oncology, Riley Hospital for Children, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA ; Melvin and Bren Simon Cancer Center, Indiana University Melvin, Indiana, USA ; Department of Pediatrics, Scripps Clinic Medical Group, Center for Organ and Cell Transplantation, La Jolla, California, USA.
Melvin and Bren Simon Cancer Center, Indiana University Melvin, Indiana, USA ; Department of Pediatrics, Scripps Clinic Medical Group, Center for Organ and Cell Transplantation, La Jolla, California, USA ; Herman B Wells Center for Pediatric Research, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA.
J Hematol Thromb. 2015 Aug;1(1). doi: 10.13188/2380-6842.1000005. Epub 2015 Aug 5.
Radiation during childhood cancer treatment increases the propensity to atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease among adult survivors of childhood cancer. This is thought to be mediated through the damage to the underlying vascular endothelium. Endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) involved in vascular endothelial repair after its damage may be affected by radiation therapy but have never been investigated in adult survivors of childhood cancer. In this pilot study, utilizing multi-parametric flowcytometry, endothelial colony forming cells (ECFCs), which are the bonafide EPCs, and circulating endothelial cells (CECs), which are not EPCs, were compared between adult survivors of childhood cancer with or without radiation exposure. In addition, their associations with blood-pressure, physical activity and diet were examined. Survivors who received radiotherapy had lower ECFCs and CECs (p<0.05) compared to those without it. Significant positive correlations included physical activity with ECFCs and diet with CECs, while blood-pressure negatively correlated with ECFCs. Further evaluation is needed to examine the effect of radiation and modifiable risk factors on ECFCs and CECs. The preliminary findings from this study suggest evidence of the role of ECFCs as biomarkers of vascular injury following treatment for childhood cancer that may help in early identification of survivors at risk for cardiovascular disease.
儿童癌症治疗期间的辐射会增加儿童癌症成年幸存者患动脉粥样硬化性心血管疾病的倾向。这被认为是通过对潜在血管内皮的损伤介导的。参与血管内皮损伤后修复的内皮祖细胞(EPCs)可能会受到放射治疗的影响,但从未在儿童癌症成年幸存者中进行过研究。在这项初步研究中,利用多参数流式细胞术,比较了有或无辐射暴露的儿童癌症成年幸存者之间的内皮集落形成细胞(ECFCs,即真正的EPCs)和循环内皮细胞(CECs,不是EPCs)。此外,还检查了它们与血压、身体活动和饮食的关联。接受放疗的幸存者与未接受放疗的幸存者相比,其ECFCs和CECs较低(p<0.05)。显著的正相关包括身体活动与ECFCs、饮食与CECs,而血压与ECFCs呈负相关。需要进一步评估以检查辐射和可改变的风险因素对ECFCs和CECs的影响。这项研究的初步结果表明,有证据支持ECFCs作为儿童癌症治疗后血管损伤生物标志物的作用,这可能有助于早期识别有心血管疾病风险的幸存者。