학술논문

Tumor aggressiveness is independent of radiation quality in murine hepatocellular carcinoma and mammary tumor models.
Document Type
Article
Source
International Journal of Radiation Biology. 2021, Vol. 97 Issue 8, p1140-1151. 12p.
Subject
*LINEAR energy transfer
*HEPATOCELLULAR carcinoma
*DISEASE risk factors
*RADIATION injuries
*LIVER cancer
*RADIATION
*ATOMIC number
Language
ISSN
0955-3002
Abstract
Estimating cancer risk associated with interplanetary space travel is complicated. Human exposure data to high atomic number, high-energy (HZE) radiation is lacking, so data from low linear energy transfer (low-LET) γ-ray radiation is used in risk models, with the assumption that HZE and γ-ray radiation have comparable biological effects. This assumption has been challenged by reports indicating that HZE radiation might produce more aggressive tumors. The goal of this research is to test whether high-LET HZE radiation induced tumors are more aggressive. Murine models of mammary and liver cancer were used to compare the impact of exposure to 0.2Gy of 300MeV/n silicon ions, 3 Gy of γ-rays or no radiation. Numerous measures of tumor aggressiveness were assessed. For the mammary cancer models, there was no significant change in the tumor latency or metastasis in silicon-irradiated mice compared to controls. For the liver cancer models, we observed an increase in tumor incidence but not tumor aggressiveness in irradiated mice. Tumors in the HZE-irradiated mice were not more aggressive than those arising from exposure to low-LET γ-rays or spontaneously. Thus, enhanced aggressiveness does not appear to be a uniform characteristic of all tumors in HZE-irradiated animals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]