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1.
Molecules ; 28(24)2023 Dec 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38138632

RESUMO

(1) Background: Radioprotective agents have garnered considerable interest due to their prospective applications in radiotherapy, public health medicine, and situations of large-scale accidental radiation exposure or impending radiological emergencies. Cystamine, an organic diamino-disulfide compound, is recognized for its radiation-protective and antioxidant properties. This study aims to utilize the aqueous ferrous sulfate (Fricke) dosimeter to measure the free-radical scavenging capabilities of cystamine during irradiation by fast carbon ions. This analysis spans an energy range from 6 to 500 MeV per nucleon, which correlates with "linear energy transfer" (LET) values ranging from approximately 248 keV/µm down to 9.3 keV/µm. (2) Methods: Monte Carlo track chemistry calculations were used to simulate the radiation-induced chemistry of aerated Fricke-cystamine solutions across a broad spectrum of cystamine concentrations, ranging from 10-6 to 1 M. (3) Results: In irradiated Fricke solutions containing cystamine, cystamine is observed to hinder the oxidation of Fe2+ ions, an effect triggered by oxidizing agents from the radiolysis of acidic water, resulting in reduced Fe3+ ion production. Our simulations, conducted both with and without accounting for the multiple ionization of water, confirm cystamine's ability to capture free radicals, highlighting its strong antioxidant properties. Aligning with prior research, our simulations also indicate that the protective and antioxidant efficiency of cystamine diminishes with increasing LET of the radiation. This result can be attributed to the changes in the geometry of the track structures when transitioning from lower to higher LETs. (4) Conclusions: If we can apply these fundamental research findings to biological systems at a physiological pH, the use of cystamine alongside carbon-ion hadrontherapy could present a promising approach to further improve the therapeutic ratio in cancer treatments.


Assuntos
Cistamina , Transferência Linear de Energia , Cistamina/farmacologia , Antioxidantes , Dosímetros de Radiação , Íons , Núcleons , Água/química , Carbono
2.
Radiat Res ; 194(6): 587-593, 2020 12 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32853343

RESUMO

It is well known that molecular oxygen is a product of the radiolysis of water with high-linear energy transfer (LET) radiation, which is distinct from low-LET radiation wherein O2 radiolytic yield is negligible. Since O2 is a powerful radiosensitizer, this fact is of practical relevance in cancer therapy with energetic heavy ions, such as carbon ions. It has recently been discovered that large doses of ionizing radiation delivered to tumors at very high dose rates (i.e., in a few milliseconds) have remarkable benefits in sparing healthy tissue while preserving anti-tumor activity compared to radiotherapy delivered at conventional, lower dose rates. This new method is called "FLASH radiotherapy" and has been tested using low-LET radiation (i.e., electrons and photons) in various pre-clinical studies and recently in a human patient. Although the exact mechanism(s) underlying FLASH are still unclear, it has been suggested that radiation delivered at high dose rates spares normal tissue via oxygen depletion. In addition, heavy-ion radiation achieves tumor control with reduced normal tissue toxicity due to its favorable physical depth-dose profile and increased radiobiological effectiveness in the Bragg peak region. To date, however, biological research with energetic heavy ions delivered at ultra-high dose rates has not been performed and it is not known whether heavy ions are suitable for FLASH radiotherapy. Here we present the additive or even synergistic advantages of integrating the FLASH dose rates into carbon-ion therapy. These benefits result from the ability of heavy ions at high LET to generate an oxygenated microenvironment around their track due to the occurrence of multiple (mainly double) ionization of water. This oxygen is abundant immediately in the tumor region where the LET of the carbon ions is very high, near the end of the carbon-ion path (i.e., in the Bragg peak region). In contrast, in the "plateau" region of the depth-dose distribution of ions (i.e., in the normal tissue region), in which the LET is significantly lower, this generation of molecular oxygen is insignificant. Under FLASH irradiation, it is shown that this early generation of O2 extends evenly over the entire irradiated tumor volume, with concentrations estimated to be several orders of magnitude higher than the oxygen levels present in hypoxic tumor cells. Theoretically, these results indicate that FLASH radiotherapy using carbon ions would have a markedly improved therapeutic ratio with greater toxicity in the tumor due to the generation of oxygen at the spread-out Bragg peak.


Assuntos
Carbono/metabolismo , Neoplasias/metabolismo , Neoplasias/radioterapia , Oxigênio/metabolismo , Radioterapia/métodos , Humanos , Método de Monte Carlo , Espécies Reativas de Oxigênio/metabolismo
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