Is the Mean Inactivation Dose a Good Measure of Cell Radiosensitivity?
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Radiation Research
- Vol. 105 (1) , 18-26
- https://doi.org/10.2307/3576721
Abstract
The relationship between the mean inactivation dose, .hivin.D, and cell radiosensitivity, particularly in the low-dose region, was investigated for linear-quadratic (LQ) and two-component (TC) cell survival curves. Although .hivin.D is approximately equal to D40 for most survival curves, the results showed that there is no consistent relationship, in theory, between .hivin.D and the extent of cell killing in the low-dose region. Curves with equal .hivin.D values could potentially represent cell populations with markedly different levels of survival after 200 rad, and conversely, curves with equal surviving fractions at 200 rad could have .hivin.D values that differ by a factor of two or more. The variability in replicate estimates of .hivin.D was also investigated and compared with that of SF200, the surviving fraction at 200 rad. The results of a simulation experiment suggest that estimates of .hivin.D are somewhat more variable than those of SF200 and are more dependent on the choice of cell survival model and the range of available data used for the estimation. It is concluded that SF200 is a more reliable and numerically stable parameter of cell radiosensitivity than .hivin.D.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Mean Inactivation Dose: A Useful Concept for Intercomparison of Human Cell Survival CurvesRadiation Research, 1984