Benedict S H, Lin P S, Zwicker R D, Huang D T, Schmidt-Ullrich R K
Radiation Oncology Department, Medical College of Virginia, Richmond 23298-0058, USA.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 1997 Mar 1;37(4):765-9. doi: 10.1016/s0360-3016(97)00023-0.
Continuous irradiation of relatively short duration as administered in gamma-ray stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) is biologically not equivalent to the more protracted intermittent exposures during accelerator-based radiosurgery with multiple arcs. Accelerator-based SRS and fractionated stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT) is currently performed with a high degree of variability in equipment and techniques resulting in highly variable treatment delivery times. The present work is designed to quantify the effects of radiation delivery times on biological effectiveness. For this, the intermittent radiation delivery schemes, typical for linac-based SRS/SRT, have been simulated in vitro to derive biological correction factors.
The experiments were carried out using U-87MG human glioma cells in suspension at 37 degrees C irradiated with 6 MV X-rays to clinically relevant doses ranging from 6 to 18 Gy, delivered over total irradiation times from 16 min to 3 h. The resulting cell survival data was used to calculate dose correction factors to compensate for wide variations in dose delivery times.
At each total dose level, cell survival increased with increasing total irradiation time. The increase in survival was more pronounced at higher dose levels. At a total dose of 12 Gy, cell survival increased by a factor of 4.7 when irradiation time was increased from 16 to 112 min. Dose correction factors were calculated to allow biologically equivalent irradiations over the range of exposure times. Cells irradiated with corrected total doses of 11.5 Gy delivered incrementally in 16 min up to 13.3 Gy in 112 min were found to exhibit the same survival within the experimental limits of accuracy.
For a given total dose, variations in dose delivery time typical of SRS/SRT techniques will result in significant changes in cell survival. In the dose range studied, an isoeffect dose correction factor of 2 to 3 cGy/min was shown to compensate for the change in delivery time for U-87 MG human gloma cells in vitro.
伽马射线立体定向放射外科(SRS)中给予的相对短时间的连续照射在生物学上并不等同于基于加速器的多弧放射外科中更持久的间歇性照射。目前,基于加速器的SRS和分次立体定向放射治疗(SRT)在设备和技术方面存在高度变异性,导致治疗交付时间差异很大。本研究旨在量化放射治疗交付时间对生物学效应的影响。为此,已在体外模拟了基于直线加速器的SRS/SRT典型的间歇性放射治疗交付方案,以得出生物学校正因子。
实验使用悬浮在37℃的U-87MG人胶质瘤细胞,用6MV X射线照射至临床相关剂量,范围为6至18Gy,总照射时间从16分钟到3小时。所得细胞存活数据用于计算剂量校正因子,以补偿剂量交付时间的广泛变化。
在每个总剂量水平下,细胞存活率随总照射时间的增加而增加。在较高剂量水平下,存活率的增加更为明显。在总剂量为12Gy时,当照射时间从16分钟增加到112分钟时,细胞存活率增加了4.7倍。计算了剂量校正因子,以允许在暴露时间范围内进行生物学等效照射。发现在16分钟内递增给予校正后总剂量11.5Gy直至在112分钟内给予13.3Gy的细胞,在实验精度范围内表现出相同的存活率。
对于给定的总剂量,SRS/SRT技术中典型的剂量交付时间变化将导致细胞存活率的显著变化。在所研究的剂量范围内,显示2至3cGy/分钟的等效应剂量校正因子可补偿体外U-87MG人胶质瘤细胞交付时间的变化。