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Radiation-Induced Leukemia at Doses Relevant to Radiation Therapy: Modeling Mechanisms and Estimating RisksBecause many cancer patients are diagnosed earlier and live longer than in the past, second cancers induced by radiation therapy have become a clinically significant issue. An earlier biologically based model that was designed to estimate risks of high-dose radiation induced solid cancers included initiation of stem cells to a premalignant state, inactivation of stem cells at high radiation doses, and proliferation of stem cells during cellular repopulation after inactivation. This earlier model predicted the risks of solid tumors induced by radiation therapy but overestimated the corresponding leukemia risks. Methods: To extend the model to radiation-induced leukemias, we analyzed in addition to cellular initiation, inactivation, and proliferation a repopulation mechanism specific to the hematopoietic system: long-range migration through the blood stream of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) from distant locations. Parameters for the model were derived from HSC biologic data in the literature and from leukemia risks among atomic bomb survivors v^ ho were subjected to much lower radiation doses. Results: Proliferating HSCs that migrate from sites distant from the high-dose region include few preleukemic HSCs, thus decreasing the high-dose leukemia risk. The extended model for leukemia provides risk estimates that are consistent with epidemiologic data for leukemia risk associated with radiation therapy over a wide dose range. For example, when applied to an earlier case-control study of 110000 women undergoing radiotherapy for uterine cancer, the model predicted an excess relative risk (ERR) of 1.9 for leukemia among women who received a large inhomogeneous fractionated external beam dose to the bone marrow (mean = 14.9 Gy), consistent with the measured ERR (2.0, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.2 to 6.4; from 3.6 cases expected and 11 cases observed). As a corresponding example for brachytherapy, the predicted ERR of 0.80 among women who received an inhomogeneous low-dose-rate dose to the bone marrow (mean = 2.5 Gy) was consistent with the measured ERR (0.62, 95% Cl =-0.2 to 1.9). Conclusions: An extended, biologically based model for leukemia that includes HSC initiation, inactivation, proliferation, and, uniquely for leukemia, long-range HSC migration predicts, %Kith reasonable accuracy, risks for radiationinduced leukemia associated with exposure to therapeutic doses of radiation.
Document ID
20100039453
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
External Source(s)
Authors
Shuryak, Igor
(Columbia Univ. New York, NY, United States)
Sachs, Rainer K.
(California Univ. Berkeley, CA, United States)
Hlatky, Lynn
(Tufts Univ. Boston, MA, United States)
Mark P. Little
(Imperial Coll. of Science, Technology and Medicine London, United Kingdom)
Hahnfeldt, Philip
(Tufts Univ. Boston, MA, United States)
Brenner, David J.
(Columbia Univ. New York, NY, United States)
Date Acquired
August 25, 2013
Publication Date
December 20, 2006
Publication Information
Publication: Journal of the National Cancer Inst.
Volume: 98
Issue: 24
Subject Category
Life Sciences (General)
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNJ06HA27G
CONTRACT_GRANT: P01CA-49062
CONTRACT_GRANT: P41EB-002033
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNJ04HF42G
CONTRACT_GRANT: U19 AI-67773
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNJ04HJ12
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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