
Y. Prezado, M. Dos Santos, W. Gonzalez, G. Jouvion, C. Guardiola, S. Heinrich, D. Labiod, M. Juchaux, L. Jourdain, C. Sebrie and F. Pouzoulet
Minibeam radiation therapy (MBRT) is an innovative synchrotron
radiotherapy technique able to shift the normal tissue complication
probability curves to significantly higher doses. However, its
exploration was hindered due to the limited and expensive beamtime at
synchrotrons. The aim of this work was to develop a cost-effective
equipment to perform systematic radiobiological studies in view of MBRT.
Tumor control for various tumor entities will be addressable as well as
studies to unravel the distinct biological mechanisms involved in
normal and tumor tissues responses when applying MBRT. With that aim, a
series of modifications of a small animal irradiator were performed to
make it suitable for MBRT experiments. In addition, the brains of two
groups of rats were irradiated. Half of the animals received a standard
irradiation, the other half, MBRT. The animals were followed-up for 6.5
months. Substantial brain damage was observed in the group receiving
standard RT, in contrast to the MBRT group, where no significant lesions
were observed. This work proves the feasibility of the transfer of MBRT
outside synchrotron sources towards a small animal irradiator.
Voir l'article en ligne : http://rdcu.be/A0dd
Voir l'article en ligne : http://rdcu.be/A0dd