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Evaluation of Different Biomarkers to Predict Individual Radiosensitivity in an Inter-Laboratory Comparison–Lessons for Future Studies

Radiotherapy is a powerful cure for several types of solid tumours, but its application is often limited because of severe side effects in individual patients. With the aim to find biomarkers capable of predicting normal tissue side reactions we analysed the radiation responses of cells from individ...

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Autores principales: Greve, Burkhard, Bölling, Tobias, Amler, Susanne, Rössler, Ute, Gomolka, Maria, Mayer, Claudia, Popanda, Odilia, Dreffke, Kristin, Rickinger, Astrid, Fritz, Eberhard, Eckardt-Schupp, Friederike, Sauerland, Christina, Braselmann, Herbert, Sauter, Wiebke, Illig, Thomas, Riesenbeck, Dorothea, Könemann, Stefan, Willich, Normann, Mörtl, Simone, Eich, Hans Theodor, Schmezer, Peter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3479094/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23110060
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0047185
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author Greve, Burkhard
Bölling, Tobias
Amler, Susanne
Rössler, Ute
Gomolka, Maria
Mayer, Claudia
Popanda, Odilia
Dreffke, Kristin
Rickinger, Astrid
Fritz, Eberhard
Eckardt-Schupp, Friederike
Sauerland, Christina
Braselmann, Herbert
Sauter, Wiebke
Illig, Thomas
Riesenbeck, Dorothea
Könemann, Stefan
Willich, Normann
Mörtl, Simone
Eich, Hans Theodor
Schmezer, Peter
author_facet Greve, Burkhard
Bölling, Tobias
Amler, Susanne
Rössler, Ute
Gomolka, Maria
Mayer, Claudia
Popanda, Odilia
Dreffke, Kristin
Rickinger, Astrid
Fritz, Eberhard
Eckardt-Schupp, Friederike
Sauerland, Christina
Braselmann, Herbert
Sauter, Wiebke
Illig, Thomas
Riesenbeck, Dorothea
Könemann, Stefan
Willich, Normann
Mörtl, Simone
Eich, Hans Theodor
Schmezer, Peter
author_sort Greve, Burkhard
collection PubMed
description Radiotherapy is a powerful cure for several types of solid tumours, but its application is often limited because of severe side effects in individual patients. With the aim to find biomarkers capable of predicting normal tissue side reactions we analysed the radiation responses of cells from individual head and neck tumour and breast cancer patients of different clinical radiosensitivity in a multicentric study. Multiple parameters of cellular radiosensitivity were analysed in coded samples of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) and derived lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) from 15 clinical radio-hypersensitive tumour patients and compared to age- and sex-matched non-radiosensitive patient controls and 15 lymphoblastoid cell lines from age- and sex- matched healthy controls of the KORA study. Experimental parameters included ionizing radiation (IR)-induced cell death (AnnexinV), induction and repair of DNA strand breaks (Comet assay), induction of yH2AX foci (as a result of DNA double strand breaks), and whole genome expression analyses. Considerable inter-individual differences in IR-induced DNA strand breaks and their repair and/or cell death could be detected in primary and immortalised cells with the applied assays. The group of clinically radiosensitive patients was not unequivocally distinguishable from normal responding patients nor were individual overreacting patients in the test system unambiguously identified by two different laboratories. Thus, the in vitro test systems investigated here seem not to be appropriate for a general prediction of clinical reactions during or after radiotherapy due to the experimental variability compared to the small effect of radiation sensitivity. Genome-wide expression analysis however revealed a set of 67 marker genes which were differentially induced 6 h after in vitro-irradiation in lymphocytes from radio-hypersensitive and non-radiosensitive patients. These results warrant future validation in larger cohorts in order to determine parameters potentially predictive for clinical radiosensitivity.
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spelling pubmed-34790942012-10-29 Evaluation of Different Biomarkers to Predict Individual Radiosensitivity in an Inter-Laboratory Comparison–Lessons for Future Studies Greve, Burkhard Bölling, Tobias Amler, Susanne Rössler, Ute Gomolka, Maria Mayer, Claudia Popanda, Odilia Dreffke, Kristin Rickinger, Astrid Fritz, Eberhard Eckardt-Schupp, Friederike Sauerland, Christina Braselmann, Herbert Sauter, Wiebke Illig, Thomas Riesenbeck, Dorothea Könemann, Stefan Willich, Normann Mörtl, Simone Eich, Hans Theodor Schmezer, Peter PLoS One Research Article Radiotherapy is a powerful cure for several types of solid tumours, but its application is often limited because of severe side effects in individual patients. With the aim to find biomarkers capable of predicting normal tissue side reactions we analysed the radiation responses of cells from individual head and neck tumour and breast cancer patients of different clinical radiosensitivity in a multicentric study. Multiple parameters of cellular radiosensitivity were analysed in coded samples of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) and derived lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) from 15 clinical radio-hypersensitive tumour patients and compared to age- and sex-matched non-radiosensitive patient controls and 15 lymphoblastoid cell lines from age- and sex- matched healthy controls of the KORA study. Experimental parameters included ionizing radiation (IR)-induced cell death (AnnexinV), induction and repair of DNA strand breaks (Comet assay), induction of yH2AX foci (as a result of DNA double strand breaks), and whole genome expression analyses. Considerable inter-individual differences in IR-induced DNA strand breaks and their repair and/or cell death could be detected in primary and immortalised cells with the applied assays. The group of clinically radiosensitive patients was not unequivocally distinguishable from normal responding patients nor were individual overreacting patients in the test system unambiguously identified by two different laboratories. Thus, the in vitro test systems investigated here seem not to be appropriate for a general prediction of clinical reactions during or after radiotherapy due to the experimental variability compared to the small effect of radiation sensitivity. Genome-wide expression analysis however revealed a set of 67 marker genes which were differentially induced 6 h after in vitro-irradiation in lymphocytes from radio-hypersensitive and non-radiosensitive patients. These results warrant future validation in larger cohorts in order to determine parameters potentially predictive for clinical radiosensitivity. Public Library of Science 2012-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC3479094/ /pubmed/23110060 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0047185 Text en © 2012 Greve et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Greve, Burkhard
Bölling, Tobias
Amler, Susanne
Rössler, Ute
Gomolka, Maria
Mayer, Claudia
Popanda, Odilia
Dreffke, Kristin
Rickinger, Astrid
Fritz, Eberhard
Eckardt-Schupp, Friederike
Sauerland, Christina
Braselmann, Herbert
Sauter, Wiebke
Illig, Thomas
Riesenbeck, Dorothea
Könemann, Stefan
Willich, Normann
Mörtl, Simone
Eich, Hans Theodor
Schmezer, Peter
Evaluation of Different Biomarkers to Predict Individual Radiosensitivity in an Inter-Laboratory Comparison–Lessons for Future Studies
title Evaluation of Different Biomarkers to Predict Individual Radiosensitivity in an Inter-Laboratory Comparison–Lessons for Future Studies
title_full Evaluation of Different Biomarkers to Predict Individual Radiosensitivity in an Inter-Laboratory Comparison–Lessons for Future Studies
title_fullStr Evaluation of Different Biomarkers to Predict Individual Radiosensitivity in an Inter-Laboratory Comparison–Lessons for Future Studies
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of Different Biomarkers to Predict Individual Radiosensitivity in an Inter-Laboratory Comparison–Lessons for Future Studies
title_short Evaluation of Different Biomarkers to Predict Individual Radiosensitivity in an Inter-Laboratory Comparison–Lessons for Future Studies
title_sort evaluation of different biomarkers to predict individual radiosensitivity in an inter-laboratory comparison–lessons for future studies
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3479094/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23110060
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0047185
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