4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Biological effects in normal cells exposed to FLASH dose rate protons

Journal

RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY
Volume 139, Issue -, Pages 51-55

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.radonc.2019.02.009

Keywords

Proton FLASH dose rate; Proton FLASH therapy; Proton FLASH irradiation; Proton radiotherapy; Proton dose rate effects

Funding

  1. National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB) [5P41EB002033]

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Background: Radiotherapy outcomes are limited by toxicity in the healthy tissues surrounding the irradiated tumor. Recent pre-clinical studies have shown that irradiations with electrons or photons delivered at so called FLASH dose rates (i.e. >40 Gy/s) dramatically reduce adverse side effects in the normal tissues while being equally efficient for tumor control as irradiations at conventional dose rates (3-5 cGy/s). In the case of protons however, FLASH effects have not been investigated partially because of the limited availability of facilities that can achieve such high dose rates. Methods: Using a novel irradiation platform, we measured acute and long-term biological effects in normal human lung fibroblasts (IMR90) exposed to therapeutically relevant doses of 4.5 MeV protons (LET = 10 keV/mm) delivered at dose rates spanning four orders of magnitude. Endpoints included clonogenic cell survival, gamma H2AX foci formation, induction of premature senescence (beta-gal), and the expression of the pro-inflammatory marker TGF beta. Results: Proton dose rate had no influence on the cell survival, but for the highest dose rate used (i.e. 1000 Gy/s) foci formation saturated beyond 10 Gy. In the progeny of irradiated cells, an increase in dose (20 Gy vs. 10 Gy) and dose rate (1000 Gy/s vs. 0.05 Gy/s) positively affected the number of senescence cells and the expression of TGF beta 1. Conclusions: In normal lung fibroblasts proton dose rate had little impact on acute effects, but significantly influenced the expression of long-term biological responses in vitro. Compared to conventional dose rates, protons delivered at FLASH dose rates mitigated such delayed detrimental effects. (C) 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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