May oxygen depletion explain the FLASH effect? A chemical track structure analysis
Oxygen depletion
Radiobiology
FOS: Physical sciences
Electrons
Radiation track structure simulation
Oxygen
03 medical and health sciences
Oxygen Consumption
0302 clinical medicine
Biological Physics (physics.bio-ph)
FLASH effect mechanism; Oxygen depletion; Radiation track structure simulation; Reactive oxygen species; Animals; Electrons; Monte Carlo Method; Radiobiology; Oxygen; Oxygen Consumption
Animals
Physics - Biological Physics
FLASH effect mechanism
Reactive oxygen species
Monte Carlo Method
FLASH effect mechanism; Oxygen depletion; Radiation track structure simulation; Reactive oxygen species
info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/610
DOI:
10.1016/j.radonc.2021.06.031
Publication Date:
2021-06-29T15:15:49Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
Background and purpose: Recent observations in animal models show that ultra-high dose rate ("FLASH") radiation treatment significantly reduces normal tissue toxicity maintaining an equivalent tumor control. The dependence of this "FLASH" effect on target oxygenation has led to the assumption that oxygen "depletion" could be its major driving force. Materials and Methods: In a bottom-up approach starting from the chemical track evolution of 1 MeV electrons in oxygenated water simulated with the TRAX-CHEM Monte Carlo code, we determine the oxygen consumption and radiolytic reactive oxygen species production following a short radiation pulse. Based on these values, the effective dose weighted by oxygen enhancement ratio (OER) or the in vitro cell survival under dynamic oxygen pressure is calculated and compared to that of conventional exposures, at constant OER. Results: We find an excellent agreement of our Monte Carlo predictions with the experimental value for radiolytic oxygen removal from oxygenated water. However, the application of the present model to published radiobiological experiment conditions shows that oxygen depletion can only have a negligible impact on radiosensitivity through oxygen enhancement, especially at typical experimental oxygenations where a FLASH effect has been observed. Conclusion: We show that the magnitude and dependence of the "oxygen depletion" hypothesis are not consistent with the observed biological effects of FLASH irradiation. While oxygenation plays an undoubted role in mediating the FLASH effect, we conclude that state-of-the-art radiation chemistry models do not support oxygen depletion and radiation-induced transient hypoxia as the main mechanism.<br/>21 pages, 8 figures<br/>
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