Comparison of in vitro and in vivo α/β ratios for prostate cancer

被引:85
作者
Carlson, DJ [1 ]
Stewart, RD
Li, XA
Jennings, K
Wang, JZ
Guerrero, M
机构
[1] Purdue Univ, Sch Hlth Sci, W Lafayette, IN 47907 USA
[2] Med Coll Wisconsin, Dept Radiat Oncol, Milwaukee, WI 53226 USA
[3] Purdue Univ, Dept Stat, W Lafayette, IN 47907 USA
[4] Univ Oklahoma, Hlth Sci Ctr, Dept Radiol Sci, Radiat Oncol Ctr, Oklahoma City, OK 73104 USA
[5] Univ Maryland, Sch Med, Dept Radiat Oncol, Baltimore, MD 21201 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1088/0031-9155/49/19/003
中图分类号
R318 [生物医学工程];
学科分类号
0831 [生物医学工程];
摘要
Parallel in vitro and in vivo studies provide insight into the relationship between clinical response and intrinsic cellular radiosensitivity and may aid in the development of predictive assays. Compilations of radiosensitivity parameters from in vitro experiments can also be used to examine the potential effectiveness of alternative or new treatment plan designs until enough clinical data become available to directly estimate the requisite radiosensitivity parameters. In this work, survival data for six prostate cancer cell lines (ten datasets total) have been extracted from the literature and re-analysed using the linear-quadratic (LQ) survival model. The paired bootstrap technique for regression is used to compute 95% confidence intervals for the estimated radiosensitivity parameters. LQ radiosensitivity parameters derived from the in vitro data are then compared to radiosensitivity parameters derived from clinical data for prostate cancer. Estimates of a range from 0.09 to 0.35 Gy(-1) (all cell lines), and the alpha/beta ratio ranges from 1.09 to 6.29 Gy (all cell lines). Point estimates of the repair half-time (PPC-1, TSU-Prl, PC-3 and DU-145 cell lines) range from 5.7 to 8.9 h (95% confidence interval from 0.26 h to 10.7 h). Differences in the radiosensitivity parameters determined from the data reported by different laboratories are as large as or larger than the differences in radiosensitivity parameters observed among the various prostate cell lines. The reported studies demonstrate that even seemingly small corrections for dose rate effects, such as those expected in high dose rate (HDR) experiments, can sometimes have a significant impact on estimates of a and alpha/beta. By neglecting dose rate effects in the analysis of HDR experiments, estimates of the alpha/beta ratio may be too high by factors as large as 1.3 to 6.2. The half-time for repair derived from the in vitro experiments appears significantly larger (slower repair rate) than estimates derived from the clinical data. However, the prostate radiosensitivity parameters a and alpha/beta may be approximately the same in vitro and in vivo. Most of the in vitro data are consistent with an alpha/beta ratio for prostate cancer less than 3 or 4 Gy.
引用
收藏
页码:4477 / 4491
页数:15
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