Repositorio digital RUNA

    • Español
    • Galego
    • English
  • Español 
    • Español
    • Galego
    • English
  • Login
RUNABibliosaúdeXunta de galicia. Consellería de sanidadeServicio Galego de saúde
  • REPOSITORIO
  • SOBRE NOSOTROS
    • Sobre RUNA
    • Normativa
    • Política Sergas
  • AYUDA
    • Ayuda
    • FAQ
  •   RUNA Principal
  • Publicación científica
  • Ver ítem
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

A model of indirect cell death caused by tumor vascular damage after high-dose radiotherapy

Rodríguez-Barbeito, P.; Díaz-Botana, P.; Gago-Arias, A.; Feijoo, M.; Neira, S.; Guiu Souto, Jacobo|Lopez-Pouso, O.; Gómez Caamaño, Antonio; Pardo-Montero, J.
Thumbnail
Estadísticas
Estadísticas
Ver Estadísticas de uso
Identificadores
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11940/15786
PMID: 31641030
DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-19-0181
ISSN: 0008-5472
Registro completo
Servicios
Servicios
RISMendeleyLinksolver
Fecha de publicación
2019
Título de revista
CANCER RESEARCH
Tipo de contenido
Artigo
DeCS
resultado del tratamiento | apoptosis | radiocirugía | capilares | proliferación celular | humanos | hipoxia celular | neoplasias | endotelio | células endoteliales
MeSH
Capillaries | Apoptosis | Radiosurgery | Cell Hypoxia | Humans | Treatment Outcome | Endothelium | Cell Proliferation | Neoplasms | Endothelial Cells
Resumen
There is increasing evidence that high doses of radiotherapy, like those delivered in stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT), trigger indirect mechanisms of cell death. Such effect seems to be two-fold. High doses may trigger an immune response and may cause vascular damage, leading to cell starvation and death. Development of mathematical response models, including indirect death, may help clinicians to design SBRT optimal schedules. Despite increasing experimental literature on indirect tumor cell death caused by vascular damage, efforts on modeling this effect have been limited. In this work, we present a biomathematical model of this effect. In our model, tumor oxygenation is obtained by solving the reaction-diffusion equation; radiotherapy kills tumor cells according to the linear-quadratic model, and also endothelial cells (EC), which can trigger loss of functionality of capillaries. Capillary death will affect tumor oxygenation, driving nearby tumor cells into severe hypoxia. Capillaries can recover functionality due to EC proliferation. Tumor cells entering a predetermined severe hypoxia status die according to a hypoxia-death model. This model fits recently published experimental data showing the effect of vascular damage on surviving fractions. It fits surviving fraction curves and qualitatively reproduces experimental values of percentages of functional capillaries 48 hours postirradiation, and hypoxic cells pre- and 48 hours postirradiation. This model is useful for exploring aspects of tumor and EC response to radiotherapy and constitutes a stepping stone toward modeling indirect tumor cell death caused by vascular damage and accounting for this effect during SBRT planning. SIGNIFICANCE: A novel biomathematical model of indirect tumor cell death caused by vascular radiation damage could potentially help clinicians interpret experimental data and design better radiotherapy schedules.

Navega

Todo RUNAColeccionesCentrosAutoresTítulosDeCSMeSHCIETipos de contenidosEsta colecciónCentrosAutoresTítulosDeCSMeSHCIETipos de contenidos

Estadísticas

Ver Estadísticas de uso

DE INTERÉS

Sobre Acceso AbiertoDerechos de autor
TwitterRSS
Xunta de Galicia
© Xunta de Galicia. Información mantida e publicada na internet pola Consellería de Sanidade o Servizo Galego de Saúde
Aviso legal | RSS
Galicia