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Heavy-Ion-Induced Lung Tumors: Dose- & LET-Dependence

There is a limited published literature reporting dose-dependent data for in vivo tumorigenesis prevalence in different organs of various rodent models after exposure to low, single doses of charged particle beams. The goal of this study is to reduce uncertainties in estimating particle-radiation-in...

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Autores principales: Chang, Polly Y., Bakke, James, Rosen, Chris J., Bjornstad, Kathleen A., Mao, Jian-Hua, Blakely, Eleanor A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9225356/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35743938
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life12060907
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author Chang, Polly Y.
Bakke, James
Rosen, Chris J.
Bjornstad, Kathleen A.
Mao, Jian-Hua
Blakely, Eleanor A.
author_facet Chang, Polly Y.
Bakke, James
Rosen, Chris J.
Bjornstad, Kathleen A.
Mao, Jian-Hua
Blakely, Eleanor A.
author_sort Chang, Polly Y.
collection PubMed
description There is a limited published literature reporting dose-dependent data for in vivo tumorigenesis prevalence in different organs of various rodent models after exposure to low, single doses of charged particle beams. The goal of this study is to reduce uncertainties in estimating particle-radiation-induced risk of lung tumorigenesis for manned travel into deep space by improving our understanding of the high-LET-dependent dose-response from exposure to individual ion beams after low particle doses (0.03–0.80 Gy). Female CB6F1 mice were irradiated with low single doses of either oxygen, silicon, titanium, or iron ions at various energies to cover a range of dose-averaged LET values from 0.2–193 keV/µm, using (137)Cs γ-rays as the reference radiation. Sham-treated controls were included in each individual experiment totally 398 animals across the 5 studies reported. Based on power calculations, between 40–156 mice were included in each of the treatment groups. Tumor prevalence at 16 months after radiation exposure was determined and compared to the age-matched, sham-treated animals. Results indicate that lung tumor prevalence is non-linear as a function of dose with suggestions of threshold doses depending on the LET of the beams. Histopathological evaluations of the tumors showed that the majority of tumors were benign bronchioloalveolar adenomas with occasional carcinomas or lymphosarcomas which may have resulted from metastases from other sites.
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spelling pubmed-92253562022-06-24 Heavy-Ion-Induced Lung Tumors: Dose- & LET-Dependence Chang, Polly Y. Bakke, James Rosen, Chris J. Bjornstad, Kathleen A. Mao, Jian-Hua Blakely, Eleanor A. Life (Basel) Article There is a limited published literature reporting dose-dependent data for in vivo tumorigenesis prevalence in different organs of various rodent models after exposure to low, single doses of charged particle beams. The goal of this study is to reduce uncertainties in estimating particle-radiation-induced risk of lung tumorigenesis for manned travel into deep space by improving our understanding of the high-LET-dependent dose-response from exposure to individual ion beams after low particle doses (0.03–0.80 Gy). Female CB6F1 mice were irradiated with low single doses of either oxygen, silicon, titanium, or iron ions at various energies to cover a range of dose-averaged LET values from 0.2–193 keV/µm, using (137)Cs γ-rays as the reference radiation. Sham-treated controls were included in each individual experiment totally 398 animals across the 5 studies reported. Based on power calculations, between 40–156 mice were included in each of the treatment groups. Tumor prevalence at 16 months after radiation exposure was determined and compared to the age-matched, sham-treated animals. Results indicate that lung tumor prevalence is non-linear as a function of dose with suggestions of threshold doses depending on the LET of the beams. Histopathological evaluations of the tumors showed that the majority of tumors were benign bronchioloalveolar adenomas with occasional carcinomas or lymphosarcomas which may have resulted from metastases from other sites. MDPI 2022-06-17 /pmc/articles/PMC9225356/ /pubmed/35743938 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life12060907 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Chang, Polly Y.
Bakke, James
Rosen, Chris J.
Bjornstad, Kathleen A.
Mao, Jian-Hua
Blakely, Eleanor A.
Heavy-Ion-Induced Lung Tumors: Dose- & LET-Dependence
title Heavy-Ion-Induced Lung Tumors: Dose- & LET-Dependence
title_full Heavy-Ion-Induced Lung Tumors: Dose- & LET-Dependence
title_fullStr Heavy-Ion-Induced Lung Tumors: Dose- & LET-Dependence
title_full_unstemmed Heavy-Ion-Induced Lung Tumors: Dose- & LET-Dependence
title_short Heavy-Ion-Induced Lung Tumors: Dose- & LET-Dependence
title_sort heavy-ion-induced lung tumors: dose- & let-dependence
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9225356/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35743938
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life12060907
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AT bjornstadkathleena heavyioninducedlungtumorsdoseletdependence
AT maojianhua heavyioninducedlungtumorsdoseletdependence
AT blakelyeleanora heavyioninducedlungtumorsdoseletdependence