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Biological Effects of Scattered Versus Scanned Proton Beams on Normal Tissues in Total Body Irradiated Mice: Survival, Genotoxicity, Oxidative Stress and Inflammation

Side effects of proton therapy are poorly studied. Moreover, the differences in the method of dose delivery on normal tissues are not taken into account when proton beams are scanned instead of being scattered. We proposed here to study the effects of both modalities of proton beam delivery on blood...

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Autores principales: Chaouni, Samia, Leduc, Alexandre, Pouzoulet, Frédéric, De Marzi, Ludovic, Megnin-Chanet, Frédérique, Stefan, Dinu, Habrand, Jean-Louis, Sichel, François, Laurent, Carine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7761103/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33255388
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antiox9121170
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author Chaouni, Samia
Leduc, Alexandre
Pouzoulet, Frédéric
De Marzi, Ludovic
Megnin-Chanet, Frédérique
Stefan, Dinu
Habrand, Jean-Louis
Sichel, François
Laurent, Carine
author_facet Chaouni, Samia
Leduc, Alexandre
Pouzoulet, Frédéric
De Marzi, Ludovic
Megnin-Chanet, Frédérique
Stefan, Dinu
Habrand, Jean-Louis
Sichel, François
Laurent, Carine
author_sort Chaouni, Samia
collection PubMed
description Side effects of proton therapy are poorly studied. Moreover, the differences in the method of dose delivery on normal tissues are not taken into account when proton beams are scanned instead of being scattered. We proposed here to study the effects of both modalities of proton beam delivery on blood; skin; lung and heart in a murine model. In that purpose; C57BL/6 mice were total body irradiated by 190.6 MeV proton beams either by Double Scattering (DS) or by Pencil Beam Scanning (PBS) in the plateau phase before the Bragg Peak. Mouse survival was evaluated. Blood and organs were removed three months after irradiation. Biomarkers of genotoxicity; oxidative stress and inflammation were measured. Proton irradiation was shown to increase lymphocyte micronucleus frequency; lung superoxide dismutase activity; erythrocyte and skin glutathione peroxidase activity; erythrocyte catalase activity; lung; heart and skin oxidized glutathione level; erythrocyte and lung lipid peroxidation and erythrocyte protein carbonylation even 3 months post-irradiation. When comparing both methods of proton beam delivery; mouse survival was not different. However, PBS significantly increased lymphocyte micronucleus frequency; erythrocyte glutathione peroxidase activity and heart oxidized glutathione level compared to DS. These results point out the necessity to take into account the way of delivering dose in PT as it could influence late side effects.
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spelling pubmed-77611032020-12-26 Biological Effects of Scattered Versus Scanned Proton Beams on Normal Tissues in Total Body Irradiated Mice: Survival, Genotoxicity, Oxidative Stress and Inflammation Chaouni, Samia Leduc, Alexandre Pouzoulet, Frédéric De Marzi, Ludovic Megnin-Chanet, Frédérique Stefan, Dinu Habrand, Jean-Louis Sichel, François Laurent, Carine Antioxidants (Basel) Article Side effects of proton therapy are poorly studied. Moreover, the differences in the method of dose delivery on normal tissues are not taken into account when proton beams are scanned instead of being scattered. We proposed here to study the effects of both modalities of proton beam delivery on blood; skin; lung and heart in a murine model. In that purpose; C57BL/6 mice were total body irradiated by 190.6 MeV proton beams either by Double Scattering (DS) or by Pencil Beam Scanning (PBS) in the plateau phase before the Bragg Peak. Mouse survival was evaluated. Blood and organs were removed three months after irradiation. Biomarkers of genotoxicity; oxidative stress and inflammation were measured. Proton irradiation was shown to increase lymphocyte micronucleus frequency; lung superoxide dismutase activity; erythrocyte and skin glutathione peroxidase activity; erythrocyte catalase activity; lung; heart and skin oxidized glutathione level; erythrocyte and lung lipid peroxidation and erythrocyte protein carbonylation even 3 months post-irradiation. When comparing both methods of proton beam delivery; mouse survival was not different. However, PBS significantly increased lymphocyte micronucleus frequency; erythrocyte glutathione peroxidase activity and heart oxidized glutathione level compared to DS. These results point out the necessity to take into account the way of delivering dose in PT as it could influence late side effects. MDPI 2020-11-24 /pmc/articles/PMC7761103/ /pubmed/33255388 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antiox9121170 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Chaouni, Samia
Leduc, Alexandre
Pouzoulet, Frédéric
De Marzi, Ludovic
Megnin-Chanet, Frédérique
Stefan, Dinu
Habrand, Jean-Louis
Sichel, François
Laurent, Carine
Biological Effects of Scattered Versus Scanned Proton Beams on Normal Tissues in Total Body Irradiated Mice: Survival, Genotoxicity, Oxidative Stress and Inflammation
title Biological Effects of Scattered Versus Scanned Proton Beams on Normal Tissues in Total Body Irradiated Mice: Survival, Genotoxicity, Oxidative Stress and Inflammation
title_full Biological Effects of Scattered Versus Scanned Proton Beams on Normal Tissues in Total Body Irradiated Mice: Survival, Genotoxicity, Oxidative Stress and Inflammation
title_fullStr Biological Effects of Scattered Versus Scanned Proton Beams on Normal Tissues in Total Body Irradiated Mice: Survival, Genotoxicity, Oxidative Stress and Inflammation
title_full_unstemmed Biological Effects of Scattered Versus Scanned Proton Beams on Normal Tissues in Total Body Irradiated Mice: Survival, Genotoxicity, Oxidative Stress and Inflammation
title_short Biological Effects of Scattered Versus Scanned Proton Beams on Normal Tissues in Total Body Irradiated Mice: Survival, Genotoxicity, Oxidative Stress and Inflammation
title_sort biological effects of scattered versus scanned proton beams on normal tissues in total body irradiated mice: survival, genotoxicity, oxidative stress and inflammation
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7761103/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33255388
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antiox9121170
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