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1.
NAR Cancer ; 4(2): zcac012, 2022 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35425901

RESUMO

Cranial irradiation is part of the standard of care for treating pediatric brain tumors. However, ionizing radiation can trigger serious long-term neurologic sequelae, including oligodendrocyte and brain white matter loss enabling neurocognitive decline in children surviving brain cancer. Oxidative stress-mediated oligodendrocyte precursor cell (OPC) radiosensitivity has been proposed as a possible explanation for this. Here, however, we demonstrate that antioxidants fail to improve OPC viability after irradiation, despite suppressing oxidative stress, suggesting an alternative etiology for OPC radiosensitivity. Using systematic approaches, we find that OPCs have higher irradiation-induced and endogenous γH2AX foci compared to neural stem cells, neurons, astrocytes and mature oligodendrocytes, and these correlate with replication-associated DNA double strand breakage. Furthermore, OPCs are reliant upon ATR kinase and Mre11 nuclease-dependent processes for viability, are more sensitive to drugs increasing replication fork collapse, and display synthetic lethality with PARP inhibitors after irradiation. This suggests an insufficiency for homology-mediated DNA repair in OPCs-a model that is supported by evidence of normal RPA but reduced RAD51 filament formation at resected lesions in irradiated OPCs. We therefore propose a DNA repair-centric mechanism of OPC radiosensitivity, involving chronically-elevated replication stress combined with 'bottlenecks' in RAD51-dependent DNA repair that together reduce radiation resilience.

2.
Phys Imaging Radiat Oncol ; 21: 90-95, 2022 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35243038

RESUMO

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Linac-based stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) planning for multi-metastatic cases is a complex and intensive process. A manual planning strategy starts with a template-based set of beam angles and applies modifications though a trial and error process. Beam angle optimization uses patient specific geometric heuristics to determine beam angles that provide optimal target coverage and avoid treating through Organs-at-Risk (OARs). This study expands on a collision prediction application developed using an application programming interface, integrating beam angle optimization and collision prediction into a Stereotactic Optimized Automated Radiotherapy (SOAR) planning algorithm. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty-five patient plans, previously treated with SRS for multi-metastatic intracranial tumors, were selected for a retrospective plan study comparing the manual planning strategy to SOAR. The SOAR algorithm was used to select isocenters, table, collimator, and gantry angles, and target groupings for the optimized plans. Dose-volume metrics for relevant OARs and PTVs were compared using double-sided Wilcoxon signed rank tests (α = 0.05). A subset of five patients were included in an efficiency study comparing manual planning times to SOAR automated times. RESULTS: OAR dose metrics compared between planning strategies showed no statistical difference for the dataset of twenty-five plans. Differences in maximum PTV dose and the conformity index were improved for SOAR planning and statistically significant. The median SOAR planning time was 9.8 min compared to 55 min for the manual planning strategy. CONCLUSIONS: SOAR planning was comparable in plan quality to a manual planning strategy with the possibility for greatly improving planning efficiency through automation.

3.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 48(19): e111, 2020 11 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33010172

RESUMO

Ionizing radiation (IR) is environmentally prevalent and, depending on dose and linear energy transfer (LET), can elicit serious health effects by damaging DNA. Relative to low LET photon radiation (X-rays, gamma rays), higher LET particle radiation produces more disease causing, complex DNA damage that is substantially more challenging to resolve quickly or accurately. Despite the majority of human lifetime IR exposure involving long-term, repetitive, low doses of high LET alpha particles (e.g. radon gas inhalation), technological limitations to deliver alpha particles in the laboratory conveniently, repeatedly, over a prolonged period, in low doses and in an affordable, high-throughput manner have constrained DNA damage and repair research on this topic. To resolve this, we developed an inexpensive, high capacity, 96-well plate-compatible alpha particle irradiator capable of delivering adjustable, low mGy/s particle radiation doses in multiple model systems and on the benchtop of a standard laboratory. The system enables monitoring alpha particle effects on DNA damage repair and signalling, genome stability pathways, oxidative stress, cell cycle phase distribution, cell viability and clonogenic survival using numerous microscopy-based and physical techniques. Most importantly, this method is foundational for high-throughput genetic screening and small molecule testing in mammalian and yeast cells.


Assuntos
Partículas alfa/efeitos adversos , Dano ao DNA/efeitos da radiação , Reparo do DNA/efeitos da radiação , Instabilidade Genômica/efeitos da radiação , Radiogenética/instrumentação , Células A549 , Ciclo Celular/efeitos da radiação , Células HeLa , Humanos , Estresse Oxidativo/efeitos da radiação , Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Transdução de Sinais/efeitos da radiação
4.
J Appl Clin Med Phys ; 20(9): 12-19, 2019 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31282083

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Increased use of Linac-based stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS), which requires highly noncoplanar gantry trajectories, necessitates the development of efficient and accurate methods of collision detection during the treatment planning process. This work outlines the development and clinical implementation of a patient-specific computed tomography (CT) contour-based solution that utilizes Eclipse Scripting to ensure maximum integration with clinical workflow. METHODS: The collision detection application uses triangle mesh structures of the gantry and couch, in addition to the body contour of the patient taken during CT simulation, to virtually simulate patient treatments. Collision detection is performed using Binary Tree Hierarchy detection methods. Algorithm accuracy was first validated for simple cuboidal geometry using a calibration phantom and then extended to an anthropomorphic phantom simulation by comparing the measured minimum distance between structures to the predicted minimum distance for all allowable orientations. The collision space was tested at couch angles every 15° from 90 to 270 with the gantry incremented by 5° through the maximum trajectory. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis was used to assess algorithm sensitivity and accuracy for predicting collision events. Following extensive validation, the application was implemented clinically for all SRS patients. RESULTS: The application was able to predict minimum distances between structures to within 3 cm. A safety margin of 1.5 cm was sufficient to achieve 100% sensitivity for all test cases. Accuracy obtained was 94.2% with the 5 cm clinical safety margin with 100% true positive collision detection. A total of 88 noncoplanar SRS patients have been currently tested using the application with one collision detected and no undetected collisions occurring. The average time for collision testing per patient was 2 min 58 s. CONCLUSIONS: A collision detection application utilizing patient CT contours was developed and successfully clinically implemented. This application allows collisions to be detected early during the planning process, avoiding patient delays and unnecessary resource utilization if detected during delivery.


Assuntos
Erros Médicos/prevenção & controle , Neoplasias/cirurgia , Imagens de Fantasmas , Radiocirurgia/instrumentação , Radiocirurgia/métodos , Planejamento da Radioterapia Assistida por Computador/métodos , Software , Algoritmos , Humanos , Posicionamento do Paciente , Reconhecimento Automatizado de Padrão , Dosagem Radioterapêutica , Radioterapia de Intensidade Modulada/métodos
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