Lymphocyte radiosensitivity: An extension to the linear-quadratic model?

•The linear-quadratic model, commonly used to analyze the impact of radiation on cells, has shown restrictions when applied to lymphocytes.•The saturation model considers a negative exponential dose-response relationship, addressing potential non-linear lymphocyte responses.•The saturation model off...

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Veröffentlicht in:Radiotherapy and oncology 2024-09, Vol.198, p.110406, Article 110406
Hauptverfasser: Pham, Thao-Nguyen, Coupey, Julie, Thariat, Juliette, Valable, Samuel
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•The linear-quadratic model, commonly used to analyze the impact of radiation on cells, has shown restrictions when applied to lymphocytes.•The saturation model considers a negative exponential dose-response relationship, addressing potential non-linear lymphocyte responses.•The saturation model offers a more accurate representation of lymphocyte response to radiation.•The saturation model can be used to assess T lymphocyte survival following exposure to X-ray and proton irradiation and observe time dependencies. The linear-quadratic (LQ) model has been pivotal for evaluating the effects of radiation on cells, but it is primarily characterized by linear responses, which has exhibited limitations when applied to lymphocyte data. The present research aims to address these limitations and to explore an alternative model extended from the conventional LQ model. Literature providing lymphocyte counts from assays investigating apoptosis and survival after in vitro irradiation was selected. To address the nonlinearity in lymphocyte responses to radiation, we developed a saturation model characterized by a negative exponential relationship between radiation dose and cellular response. We compared the performance of this saturation model against that of conventional models, including the LQ model and its variants (linear model LM and linear-quadratic-cubic model LQC), as well as the repair-misrepair (RMR) model. The models were evaluated based on prediction-residual plots, residual standard errors, and the Akaike information criterion (AIC). We applied the saturation model to two additional datasets: (1) a dataset from the existing literature that assessed stimulated and unstimulated human lymphocytes exposed to gamma irradiation in vitro and (2) a novel dataset involving T lymphocytes from rodent spleens after exposure to various radiation types (X-rays and protons). The literature (n = 15 out of 2342) showed that lymphocyte apoptosis varies with dose, time and experimental conditions. The saturation model had a lower AIC of 718 compared to the LM, LQ, LQC and RMR models (AIC of 728, 720, 720 and 734, respectively). The saturation model had a lower residual error and more consistent error distribution. Integrating time as a covariate, the saturation model also had a better AIC for demonstrating time-dependent variations in lymphocyte responses after irradiation. For datasets involving unstimulated lymphocytes before irradiation, the saturation model provided a mor
ISSN:0167-8140
1879-0887
1879-0887
DOI:10.1016/j.radonc.2024.110406