Radiosensitivity of radiotherapy patients: The effect of individual DNA repair capacity
•Healthy volunteers and patients without skin reaction present similar radiation-induced damage.•DNA repair kinetics between healthy individuals and patients without radiotoxicity was similar.•Patients with skin toxicity showed lower DNA repair ability and more residual damage.•The DNA repair effici...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Mutation research. Genetic toxicology and environmental mutagenesis 2021-07, Vol.867, p.503371-503371, Article 503371 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Healthy volunteers and patients without skin reaction present similar radiation-induced damage.•DNA repair kinetics between healthy individuals and patients without radiotoxicity was similar.•Patients with skin toxicity showed lower DNA repair ability and more residual damage.•The DNA repair efficiency could act as an endophenotype of acute radiotoxicity.
Individual radiosensitivity is a critical problem in radiotherapy because of the treatment restrictions it imposes. We have tested whether induction/repair of genomic lesions correlates with the acute cutaneous effects of radiotherapy. Peripheral blood samples of 56 healthy volunteers and 18 patients with breast cancer were studied. DNA damage and DNA repair capacity were assessed in vitro (alkaline comet assay). Patients without skin reaction did not show significant differences from healthy individuals, with respect to either initial or radiation-induced DNA damage. Similar DNA repair kinetics, fitting a decreasing exponential response, were observed in both groups, and there were no significant differences in residual genotoxic damage. In contrast, patients exhibiting acute side effects showed significantly lower DNA repair ability and significantly more residual damage, compared to patients without radiotoxicity. This approach may help to identify patients who are at greater risk of radiotherapy side effects. However, many other factors, such as dosimetry, irradiated volume, and lifestyle should also be considered in the evaluation of individual radiosensitivity. |
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ISSN: | 1383-5718 1879-3592 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.mrgentox.2021.503371 |