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Repair, redistribution and repopulation in V79 spheroids during multifraction irradiation
Author(s) -
Brown R. C.,
Durand R. E.
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
cell proliferation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.647
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1365-2184
pISSN - 0960-7722
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2184.1994.tb01431.x
Subject(s) - repopulation , radiosensitivity , spheroid , biology , cancer research , radiation therapy , dose fractionation , radiobiology , immunology , cell culture , genetics , medicine , stem cell , haematopoiesis
. Development of predictive assays for measuring tumour radiosensitivity has generated much recent interest, particularly with the recognition that tumour cell survival at doses of about 2 Gy may correlate well with tumour curability. Clinical data, however, suggest that overall treatment time may be of considerable significance in radioresponsive tumours, especially for rapidly growing tumours capable of accelerated repopulation. Because neither factor can be repeatedly assessed in human tumours, we used cells growing as multicell spheroids to determine whether the initial radiation response would be predictive for multifraction exposures, or whether other factors including repopulation rate should be considered. Potential problems of hypoxia and reoxygenation were avoided by using small spheroids which had not yet developed radiobiologically hypoxic regions. Repair and redistribution dominated the responses in the first two or three exposures, with repopulation playing a minor role. As the fractionation schedule was extended, however, repopulation between fractions largely determined the number of viable cells per spheroid. We conclude that the radiation response of cells from untreated spheroids provides a general indication of net sensitivity, but that repair and redistribution produces considerable variation in radiosensitivity throughout a fractionation protocol. Ultimately, repopulation effects may dominate the multifraction response.

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