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Estimation of absorbed organ doses used in computed tomography (CT) using time-intensive Monte Carlo simulations with virtual patient anatomic models is not widely reported in the literature. Using the library of computational phantoms developed by the University of Florida and the National Cancer Institute, we performed Monte Carlo simulations to calculate organ dose values for 9 CT categories representing the most common body regions and indications for imaging (reflecting low, routine, and high radiation dose examinations), stratified by patient age (in children) and effective diameter (in adults, using diameter as a measure of patient size). Our sample of 559,202 adult and 103,423 pediatric CT examinations was prospectively assembled between 2015–2020 from 156 imaging facilities from 27 healthcare organizations in 20 U.S. states and 7 countries in the University of California San Francisco International CT Dose Registry. Organ doses varied by body region and exam type. For example, the mean brain dose associated with head CT was 20 mGy [standard deviation (SD) 14] for head low dose, 46 mGy (SD 21) for head routine dose, and 64 mGy (SD 31) for head high dose scan protocols. The mean colon doses associated with abdomen and pelvis CT were 19 mGy (SD 12), 32 mGy (SD 28), and 69 mGy (SD 42) for low, routine, and high dose examinations, respectively. Organ doses in general varied modestly by patient diameter, and for many categories the organ doses among the largest quartile of patients were no more than 10% higher than doses in the smallest quartile. For example, for abdomen and pelvis high dose, the colon dose increased from 67 to 74 mGy from the smallest to the largest patients (10% increase). With few exceptions, pediatric organ doses also varied relatively little by patient age, except for the youngest children who, on average, had higher organ doses. Thyroid dose, however, tended to increase with age in neck or cervical spine and chest CT. Overall, the highest organ doses were to the skin, thyroid, brain, and eye lens. Mean organ doses differ substantially by site. The organ dose values included in this report are derived from empirical clinical exams and offer useful, representative values. Large inter-site variations demonstrate areas for radiation dose reduction.
Sarah A. King, Shane R. Solst, Claire H. Graham, Lianna Z. Fiore, Rana Rheem, Ann Tomanek-Chalkley, Melissa A. Fath, Joseph M. Caster, Douglas R. Spitz, Michelle E. Howard
Diffuse intrinsic pontine gliomas (DIPG) are highly aggressive and treatment-resistant childhood primary brainstem tumors with a median survival of less than one year after diagnosis. The prevailing standard of care for DIPG, radiation therapy, does not prevent fatal disease progression, with most patients succumbing to this disease 3–8 months after completion of radiation therapy. This underscores the urgent need for novel combined-modality approaches for enhancing therapy responses. This study demonstrates that the cellular redox modulating drug, copper (II)-diacetyl-bis(N4-methylthiosemicarbazone) (Cu-ATSM) dose-dependently (1–3 µM) decreased clonogenic cell survival in SU-DIPG50 and SU-DIPG36 cell lines during 6 h of exposure but had no significant effect on survival in normal human astrocytes (NHA). Additional significant (>90%) decreases in DIPG clonogenic survival were observed at 24 h of Cu-ATSM exposure. However, NHAs also began to show dose-dependent 10–70% survival decreases at this point. Notably, 3 µM CuATSM for 6 h resulted in additive clonogenic cell killing of DIPG lines when combined with radiation, which was not seen in NHAs and was partially inhibited by the copper chelator, bathocuproinedisulfonic acid. Cu-ATSM toxicity in DIPG cells was also inhibited by overexpression of mitochondrial-targeted catalase. These results support the hypothesis that Cu-ATSM is selectively cytotoxic to DIPGs by a mechanism involving H2O2 generation and copper and being additively cytotoxic with ionizing radiation.
The prolonged exposure to multiple spaceflight stressors during long-duration missions to the Moon and Mars will be challenging to the physical and mental health of the astronauts. Ground-based studies have reported that attentional set-shifting task (ATSET) performance is impaired after space radiation (SR) exposure. At certain times during deep-space missions, astronauts will likely have to contend with the combined impacts of SR and sleep perturbation. In rats, poor quality, fragmented sleep adversely impacts performance in multiple cognitive tasks, including the ATSET task. While both SR and sleep perturbations independently cause cognitive performance deficits, the incidence, severity and exact nature of those decrements following combined exposure to these flight stressors is largely unknown. This study established the impact that a single night of fragmented sleep has on ATSET performance in both male and female rats exposed to 10 cGy of galactic cosmic ray simulation (GCRsim). The GCRsim beam is a complex beam that mimics the mass and energy spectra of the SR particles that an astronaut will be exposed to within the spacecraft. Rats that had no obvious ATSET performance decrements when normally rested were subjected to fragmented sleep and their ATSET performance reassessed. Sleep fragmentation resulted in significant ATSET performance decrements in GCRsim-exposed rats, with specific performance decrements being observed in stages where attention or cue shifting is extensively used. Performance decrements in these stages are rarely observed after SR exposure. While both male and female rats exhibited latent sleep-related performance decrements, these were sex dependent, with male and female rats exhibiting different types of performance decrements (either reduced processing speed or task completion efficiency) in different stages of the ATSET task. This study suggests that SR-induced cognitive impairment may not be fully evident in normally rested rats, with an underestimation of both the incidence and nature of performance decrements that could occur when multiple space flight stressors are present. These data suggest that that there may be synergistic interactions between multiple space flight stressors that may not be easily predicted from their independent actions.
Biodosimetry is a key diagnostic tool for radiation exposure, risk assessment and treatment planning of acute radiation sickness. To effectively respond to a large-scale radiological incident, there is a need for the development of biodosimetric methods with fast, portable, and convenient operating advantages. We employed the recombinase polymerase amplification specific high-sensitivity enzymatic reporter unlocking (RPA-SHERLOCK) technology to establish a method for fast radiation dose assessment by measuring the expression level of radiation-inducible genes. Moreover, we proposed for the first time the principle of quantitative detection of curve slopes based on this method. Using this new method, changes in mRNA expression were confirmed in a number of radiation-sensitive genes (XPC, CDKN1A, and ATM) in human lymphocytes after irradiation. The standard curve of the dose-effect relationship was established, which can be used to quickly determine the exposed dose of the irradiated samples. Compared with traditional detection methods such as RT-qPCR, this method was found to be more convenient, fast and easy to operate. With the same amount of template input as RT-qPCR, the detection time of this method can be shortened to less than 20 min. The detection instrument required by this method is also more portable than a qPCR system.
Aashish Soni, Daniela Beisser, Emil Mladenov, Matthias Höller, Inken Wohlers, Vladimir Nikolov, Simon Magin, Tamara Mussfeldt, Ludger Klein-Hitpass, Michael N. Cornforth, Bradford D. Loucas, Sven Rahmann, George Iliakis
It is thought that cells surviving ionizing radiation exposure repair DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) and restore their genomes. However, the recent biochemical and genetic characterization of DSB repair pathways reveals that only homologous recombination (HR) can function in an error-free manner and that the non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) pathways canonical NHEJ (c-NHEJ), alternative end joining (alt-EJ), and single-strand annealing (SSA) are error-prone, and potentially leave behind genomic scars and altered genomes. The strong cell cycle restriction of HR to S/ G2 phases and the unparalleled efficiency of c-NHEJ throughout the cell cycle, raise the intriguing question as to how far a surviving cell reaches after repairing the genome back to its pre-irradiation state. Indeed, there is evidence that the genomes of cells surviving radiation treatment harbor extensive genomic alterations. To directly investigate this possibility, we adopted next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies and tested a normal human fibroblast cell line, 82-6 hTert, after exposure up to 6 Gy. Cells were irradiated and surviving colonies expanded and the cells frozen. Sequencing analysis using the Illumina sequencing platform and comparison with the unirradiated genome detected frequent genomic alterations in the six investigated radiation survivor clones, including translocations and large deletions. Translocations detected by this analysis and predicted to generate visible cytogenetic alterations were frequently (three out of five) confirmed using mFISH cytogenetic analysis. PCR analysis of selected deletions also confirmed seven of the ten examined. We conclude that cells surviving radiation exposure tolerate and pass to their progeny a wide spectrum of genomic alterations. This recognition needs to be integrated into the interpretation of biological results at all endpoints, as well as in the formulation of mathematical models of radiation action. NGS analysis of irradiated genomes promises to enhance molecular cytogenetics by increasing the spectrum of detectable genomic alterations and advance our understanding of key molecular radiobiological effects and the logic underpinning DSB repair. However, further developments in the technology will be required to harness its full potential.
Although multiple studies suggest that ionizing radiation can induce bystander effects (radiation-induced bystander effect, RIBE) in cultured cell lines, it is still unclear whether RIBE is evolutionarily conserved in invertebrates. In this study, we investigated the frequency of cell death of unirradiated starfish (Patiria pectinifera) oocytes co-cultured with oocytes irradiated with X rays (0, 2 and 4 Gy). We observed increased frequencies of cell death determined by morphological abnormality and TUNEL-positive cells in unirradiated oocytes co-cultured with oocytes irradiated with 2 Gy or 4 Gy oocytes. In addition, the seawater cultured with 4 Gy irradiated oocytes induced cell death in unirradiated oocytes, and TUNEL-positive cells were observed. Our results suggest that RIBE is evolutionarily conserved in starfish.
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