Ultra-high dose rate FLASH effect on head and neck cancer cells and normal salivary gland in mice
Eunji Kim,
Korea Republic of
PO-1822
Abstract
Ultra-high dose rate FLASH effect on head and neck cancer cells and normal salivary gland in mice
Authors: Eunji Kim1, Kwangmo Yang1, Mi-Sook Kim1, Won Il Jang1, Hyunkyung Kim2, Myung-Jin Park3, Jeong-Yub Kim3
1Korea Institute of Radiological and Medical Sciences, Radiation Oncology, Seoul, Korea Republic of; 2Korea Institute of Radiological & Medical Sciences, Clinical Translational Research Team, Seoul, Korea Republic of; 3Korea Institute of Radiological and Medical Sciences, Radiation Therapeutics Development Team, Seoul, Korea Republic of
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Purpose or Objective
Ultra-high dose rate irradiation (FLASH) is a novel therapeutic modality
that has been reported to spare tissues compared to conventional dose rate. We
aimed to investigate the effect of FLASH on head and neck (H&N) cancer
cells and salivary gland dysfunction caused by radiotherapy.
Material and Methods
H&N cancer cells
(HSG and FaDu) were irradiated with 10 MeV electron beam at a dose rate of
132.2Gy/s (FLASH) or 0.1Gy/s (CONV), by a modified clinic linear accelerator.
The irradiated dose was confirmed with EBT-XD film, and 3, 7, and 11 Gy were
irradiated. We evaluated the cell cycle and the surviving fraction of cells
with clonogenic assays. We administered single dose head and neck irradiation
to mice with a 6 MeV electron beam at dose rate of 105.6-126 Gy/s (FLASH) or
0.03Gy/s (CONV), using a modified linear accelerator. The irradiated dose was
confirmed with EBT3 film, and 9-76 Gy and 10-30 Gy were irradiated for FLASH
and CONV, respectively. Parotid and submandibular glands were obtained from
mice at 3 and 30 days after irradiation. Immunohistological examination and
apoptotic assays were conducted to assess the radiation response.
Results
The proportion of sub G0/G1 was higher in the FLASH group, and the
surviving fraction was significantly decreased in FLASH through every dose
range. At three days post-irradiation, both 10 Gy and 30 Gy irradiated groups
showed a greater number of salivary cells and increased expression of AQP5 in
FLASH compared to conventional irradiated mice. As a late toxicity (30 days of
irradiation), fibrosis did not show any significant difference, although FLASH
group received much higher radiation dose. There was no difference in apoptosis
between groups on post 3 days, but FLASH showed significantly less degree of
apoptosis on 30 days after irradiation.
Conclusion
This study demonstrates that FLASH irradiation strengthens the
therapeutic effect for H&N cancers and attenuates radiation-induced
salivary gland damage. Further research is needed on the biological mechanisms
involved.