4.5 Article

Total body irradiation models in NHPs - consideration of animal sex and provision of supportive care to advance model development

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION BIOLOGY
Volume 97, Issue 2, Pages 126-130

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09553002.2021.1844335

Keywords

Medical countermeasures against radiation (MCM); non-human primates (NHP); total body irradiation (TBI); dose– response relationship (DRR)

Funding

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infection Diseases [HHSN272201500013I]
  2. National Institutes of Health Department of Health and Human Services [HHS0100200800060C, HHSO100201100045C, HHSO100201000051C]

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The use of sex-specific animal models and different levels of supportive care can affect the dose to mortality response of rhesus macaques in total body irradiation models. Studies show that females have higher mortality rates than males at identical radiation doses, and blood transfusions can increase survival rates for male animals at lower doses but not at high doses of radiation exposure.
Purpose Harmonized animal models are an indispensable tool for the development of safe and effective medical countermeasures (MCMs) against radiation injury, and rhesus macaques (referred herein as NHPs) play a critical role in FDA approval of radiation medical countermeasures for acute and delayed radiation syndromes. Reliance on such models requires that they be well characterized, which consists, in part, of a reproducible dose to mortality response relationship (DRR). However, data describing the DRR for both male and female NHPs from the same study are scarce. Furthermore, the level of supportive care and the use of blood transfusions may shift the DRR, yet such information can be difficult to compare across publications. To address these knowledge gaps, the DRRs of two different NHP total body irradiation (TBI) models are compared in this paper, one which is reliant on the use of male animals provided blood transfusions, and the other which incorporates both sexes wherein animals are not provided transfusions. Materials and methods Studies were conducted using NHPs (Macacca mulatta) receiving TBI, with survival reported over a 60 days. Two primary studies, incorporating both male and female animals not receiving blood transfusions as a provision of supportive care, were compared to two previously published studies, which incorporated only male animals provided blood transfusions as a part of the supportive care regimen. Criterion for euthanasia, and all other provisions of supportive care were comparable. Linear probit plots estimating the lethal dose (LD) and upper and lower limits of the 95% confidence interval (CI) for 10, 30, 50, 70 and 90% mortality, were compared between individual studies and the two models presented. Results Comparison of probit estimates reveals two important findings. (1) Females have higher mortality than males at identical radiation doses, and (2) blood transfusions increased survival of male animals at lower doses but not at high doses of radiation exposure. Conclusions The use of single sex animal models may lead to an incomplete understanding of potential sex differences in the dose to mortality response of the TBI model. Consistent use of both sexes and type of supportive care will improve the transferability and reliability of NHP-TBI models currently in use, assist in the selection of radiation doses for single dose lethality studies, and allow investigators to determine the effectiveness of a particular MCM.

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