Solanki Jay H, Tritt Thomas, Pasternack Jordan B, Kim Julia J, Leung Calvin N, Domogauer Jason D, Colangelo Nicholas W, Narra Venkat R, Howell Roger W
a Division of Radiation Research, Department of Radiology, New Jersey Medical School Cancer Center Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Newark, New Jersey.
b Department of Radiation Oncology, Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, New Jersey.
Radiat Res. 2017 Aug;188(2):221-234. doi: 10.1667/RR14766.1. Epub 2017 May 25.
The treatment of cancer using targeted radionuclide therapy is of interest to nuclear medicine and radiation oncology because of its potential for killing tumor cells while minimizing dose-limiting toxicities to normal tissue. The ionizing radiations emitted by radiopharmaceuticals deliver radiation absorbed doses over protracted periods of time with continuously varying dose rates. As targeted radionuclide therapy becomes a more prominent part of cancer therapy, accurate models for estimating the biologically effective dose (BED) or equieffective dose (EQD2) will become essential for treatment planning. This study examines the radiobiological impact of the dose rate increase half-time during the uptake phase of the radiopharmaceutical. MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cells and V79 Chinese hamster lung fibroblasts were irradiated chronically with 662 keV γ rays delivered with time-varying dose rates that are clinically relevant. The temporal dose-rate patterns were: 1. acute, 2. exponential decrease with a half-time of 64 h (T = 64 h), 3. initial exponential increase to a maximum (half time T = 2, 8 or 24 h) followed by exponential decrease (T = 64 h). Cell survival assays were conducted and surviving fractions were determined. There was a marked reduction in biological effect when T was increased. Cell survival data were tested against existing dose-response models to assess their capacity to predict response. Currently accepted models that are used in radiation oncology overestimated BED and EQD2 at low-dose rates and underestimated them at high-dose rates. This appears to be caused by an adaptive response arising as a consequence of the initial low-dose-rate phase of exposure. An adaptive response function was derived that yields more accurate BED and EQD2 values over the spectrum of dose rates and absorbed doses delivered. Our experimental data demonstrate a marked increase in cell survival when the dose-rate-increase half-time is increased, thereby suggesting an adaptive response arising as a consequence of this phase of exposure. We have modified conventional radiobiological models used in the clinic for brachytherapy and external beams of radiation to account for this phenomenon and facilitate their use for treatment planning in targeted radionuclide therapy.
靶向放射性核素疗法治疗癌症受到核医学和放射肿瘤学的关注,因为它有可能杀死肿瘤细胞,同时将对正常组织的剂量限制毒性降至最低。放射性药物发出的电离辐射在很长一段时间内以不断变化的剂量率提供辐射吸收剂量。随着靶向放射性核素疗法在癌症治疗中变得越来越突出,准确估计生物有效剂量(BED)或等效剂量(EQD2)的模型对于治疗计划将变得至关重要。本研究考察了放射性药物摄取阶段剂量率增加半衰期的放射生物学影响。用临床相关的随时间变化的剂量率给予662keVγ射线,对MDA-MB-231人乳腺癌细胞和V79中国仓鼠肺成纤维细胞进行长期照射。时间剂量率模式为:1.急性,2.半衰期为64小时(T = 64小时)的指数下降,3.初始指数增加至最大值(半衰期T = 2、8或24小时),随后指数下降(T = 64小时)。进行细胞存活试验并确定存活分数。当T增加时,生物学效应显著降低。根据现有的剂量反应模型对细胞存活数据进行测试,以评估它们预测反应的能力。目前放射肿瘤学中使用并被接受的模型在低剂量率时高估了BED和EQD2,而在高剂量率时低估了它们。这似乎是由暴露初始低剂量率阶段产生的适应性反应引起的。推导了一个适应性反应函数,该函数在剂量率和吸收剂量范围内产生更准确的BED和EQD2值。我们的实验数据表明,当剂量率增加半衰期增加时,细胞存活率显著增加,从而表明这一暴露阶段会产生适应性反应。我们修改了临床上用于近距离放疗和外照射放疗的传统放射生物学模型,以考虑这一现象,并便于将其用于靶向放射性核素疗法的治疗计划。