In vitro study of cell survival following dynamic MLC intensity-modulated radiation therapy dose delivery

被引:69
作者
Moiseenko, Vitali
Duzenli, Cheryl
Durand, Ralph E.
机构
[1] British Columbia Canc Agcy, Vancouver Canc Ctr, Vancouver, BC V5Z 4E6, Canada
[2] Univ British Columbia, Dept Phys & Astron, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1, Canada
[3] BCCA Canc Res Ctr, Vancouver, BC V5Z 1L3, Canada
关键词
intensity modulated radiation therapy; cell survival; prolonged dose delivery; in vitro;
D O I
10.1118/1.2712044
中图分类号
R8 [特种医学]; R445 [影像诊断学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100207 ; 1009 ;
摘要
The possibility of reduced cell kill following intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) compared to conventional radiation therapy has been debated in the literature. This potential reduction in cell kill relates to prolonged treatment times typical of IMRT dose delivery and consequently increased repair of sublethal lesions. While there is some theoretical support to this reduction in cell kill published in the literature, direct experimental evidence specific to IMRT dose delivery patterns is lacking. In this study we present cell survival data for three cell lines: Chinese hamster V79 fibroblasts, human cervical carcinoma, SiHa and colon adenocarcinoma, WiDr. Cell survival was obtained for 2.1 Gy delivered as acute dose with parallel-opposed pair (POP), irradiation time 75 s, which served as a reference; regular seven-field IMRT, irradiation time 5 min; and IMRT with a break for multiple leaf collimator (MLC) re-initialization after three fields were delivered, irradiation time 10 min. An actual seven-field dynamic MLC IMRT plan for a head and neck patient was used. The 1MRT plan was generated for a Varian EX or iX linear accelerator with 120 leaf Millenium MLC. Survival data were also collected for doses 1 X, 2 X, 3 X, 4 X, and 5 X 2.1 Gy to establish parameters of the linear-quadratic equation describing survival following acute dose delivery. Cells were irradiated inside an acrylic cylindrical phantom specifically designed for this study. Doses from both INIRT and POP were validated using ion chamber measurements. A reproducible increase in cell survival was observed following IMRT dose delivery. This increase varied from small for V79, with a surviving fraction of 0.8326 following POP vs 0.8420 following uninterrupted IMRT, to very pronounced for SiHa, with a surviving fraction of 0.3903 following POP vs 0.5330 for uninterrupted IMRT. When compared to IMRT or IMRT with a break for MLC initialization, cell survival following acute dose delivery was significantly different, p < 0.05, in three out of six cases. In contrast, when cell survival following IMRT was compared to that following IMRT with a break for MLC initialization the difference was always statistically insignificant. When projected to a 30 fraction treatment, dose deficit to bring cell survival to the same value as in POP was calculated as 4.1, 24.9, and 3 1.1 Gy for V79, WiDr, and SiHa cell lines, respectively. The dose deficit did not relate to the alpha/beta ratio obtained in this study for the three cell lines. Clinical data do not show reduction in local control following IMRT. Possible reasons for this are discussed. The obtained data set can serve as a test data set for models designed to explore the effect of dose delivery prolongation/fractionation in IMRT on radiation therapy outcome. (c) 2007 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.
引用
收藏
页码:1514 / 1520
页数:7
相关论文
共 29 条
[11]  
Milano MT, 2006, INT J ONCOL, V28, P1141
[12]   Effects of IMRT treatment time prolongation on tumor cell survival [J].
Mogili, N. ;
Joiner, M. ;
Burmeister, J. .
MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2006, 33 (06) :2294-2294
[13]   The effect of fraction time in intensity modulated radiotherapy:: theoretical and experimental evaluation of an optimization problem (the real conclusions):: in regard to Mu et al. Radiotherapy on Oncology 2003; 68: 181-87 -: Reply [J].
Mu, X ;
Löfroth, PO ;
Karlsson, M ;
Zackrisson, B .
RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY, 2004, 72 (01) :114-115
[14]   The effect of fraction time in intensity modulated radiotherapy:: theoretical and experimental evaluation of an optimisation problem [J].
Mu, XK ;
Löfront, PO ;
Karlsson, M ;
Zackrisson, B .
RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY, 2003, 68 (02) :181-187
[15]   Biological effects of intermittent radiation in cultured tumor cells: Influence of fraction number and dose per fraction [J].
Ogino, H ;
Shibamoto, Y ;
Sugie, C ;
Ito, M .
JOURNAL OF RADIATION RESEARCH, 2005, 46 (04) :401-406
[16]   Late xerostomia after intensity-modulated radiation therapy versus conventional radiotherapy [J].
Pacholke, HD ;
Amdur, RJ ;
Morris, CG ;
Li, JG ;
Dempsey, JF ;
Hinerman, RW ;
Mendenhall, WM .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY-CANCER CLINICAL TRIALS, 2005, 28 (04) :351-358
[17]   Changes in tumor cell response due to prolonged dose delivery times in fractionated radiation therapy [J].
Paganetti, H .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION ONCOLOGY BIOLOGY PHYSICS, 2005, 63 (03) :892-900
[18]   Intensity-modulated radiation therapy in head and neck cancers - Dosimetric advantages and update of clinical results [J].
Puri, DR ;
Chou, W ;
Lee, N .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY-CANCER CLINICAL TRIALS, 2005, 28 (04) :415-423
[19]   Fractionated X-radiation treatment can elicit an inducible-like radioprotective response that is not dependent on the intrinsic cellular X-radiation resistance/sensitivity [J].
Qutob, Sami S. ;
Multani, Asha S. ;
Pathak, S. ;
McNamee, James P. ;
Bellier, Pascale V. ;
Liu, Qing Yan ;
Ng, Cheng E. .
RADIATION RESEARCH, 2006, 166 (04) :590-599
[20]   Intensity modulated radiotherapy for head and neck cancer:: evidence for preserved salivary gland function [J].
Saarilahti, K ;
Kouri, M ;
Collan, J ;
Hämäläinen, T ;
Atula, T ;
Joensuu, H ;
Tenhunen, M .
RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY, 2005, 74 (03) :251-258