Radiobiology 6 Flashcards

1
Q

How does fractionation impact the cell survival curve?

A
  • treating in multiple fractions allows sub-lethal repair to take place, so the shape of the curve repeats from where the previous curve ended
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2
Q

Therapeutic ratio and assessing cell kill…

A
  • NTCP may look different to TCP

- They have different thresholds

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3
Q

What are the 5 R’s?

A
  • Radiosensitivity
  • Repair
  • Repopulation
  • Reoxygenation
  • Re-distribution
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4
Q

Radiosensitivity

A
  • Intrinsic radiosensitivity differs between cells and normal tissues and strongly determines final surviving fraction
  • Accounts for variable tumour response, more radiosensitive, less dose needed and therefore could be better for normal tissues
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5
Q

Repair

A
  • Cells differ in capacity to repair, this is usually more effective in non-proliferating cells
  • repair for normal tissues is important, so six hours is allowed so as not to compromise this repair
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6
Q

Repopulation

A

Surviving cells in many tumours and acute-responding tissues proliferate more rapidly once treatment has begun

  • More time allowed, means less time for tumour to grow/repopulate
  • Acute effects will worsen
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7
Q

Reoxygenation

A
  • Hypoxic cells, which occur especially in tumours are quite resistant to radiation. Hypoxic surviving cells begin to reoxygenate
  • allowing cells to reoxygenate is a good thing (become more radiosensitive), lack of oxygen could lead to resistance
  • further from blood vessel = more oxygenated as treated, shrink and move toward oxygen area, cycle
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8
Q

Redistribution

A
  • Cells in certain phases are quite resistant

- Time between fractions means cells will redistribute themselves across the cell cycle

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9
Q

How do we optimise fractionation?

A
  • Spare normal tissues, kill tumour tissues
  • alpha/beta ratio for tumour is usually higher than normal tissues - in a small dose per fraction, large impact on tumour, less on normal cells - large dose per fraction, more impact on normal tissues
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10
Q

BED means?

A
  • Biologically effective dose
  • Unit is Gy
  • When using BED, assume delivering same dose to tumour and to NT
  • Also does not take into account repopulation.
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