Biological characteristics of carbon-ion therapy
- 1 January 2009
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal of Radiation Biology
- Vol. 85 (9) , 715-728
- https://doi.org/10.1080/09553000903072470
Abstract
Purpose: Radiotherapy using charged and/or high-linear energy transfer (LET) particles has a long history, starting with proton beams up to now carbon-ions. Radiation quality of particle beams is different from conventional photons, and therefore the biological effects of high-LET irradiation have attracted scientific interests of many scientists in basic and clinical fields. A brief history of particle radiotherapy in the past half-century is followed by the reviewed biological effectiveness of high-LET charged particles. Results: The latter includes 54 papers presenting 506 RBE (relative biological effectiveness) values for carbon ions and a total of 290 RBE values for other ions identified from 48 papers. By setting a selection window of LET up to 100 keV/μm, we fitted a linear regression line to an LET-RBE relation. The resulting slope of the regression line had a dimension of μm/keV, and showed different steepness for different cells/tissues and endpoints as well. The steepest regression was found for chromosome aberration of human malignant melanoma while the shallowest was for apoptosis of rodent cells/tissue. Both tumour and normal tissue showed relatively shallower slopes than colony formation. Conclusions: In general, there is a large variation of slope values, but the majority (25 out of 29 values) of data was smaller than 0.05 μm/keV.Keywords
This publication has 112 references indexed in Scilit:
- Energetic heavy ions accelerate differentiation in the descendants of irradiated normal human diploid fibroblastsMutation Research - Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis, 2008
- Liquid holding recovery kinetics in wild-type and radiosensitive mutants of the yeast Saccharomyces exposed to low- and high-LET radiationsMutation Research - Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis, 2005
- Apoptosis induced by high-LET radiations is not affected by cellular p53 gene statusInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 2005
- The “Pro-drug” RibCys Decreases the Mutagenicity of High-LET Radiation in Cultured Mammalian CellsRadiation Research, 2003
- RBE—LET Relationships for Different Types of Lethal Radiation Damage in Mammalian Cells: Comparison with DNA Dsb and an Interpretation of Differences in RadiosensitivityInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1994
- A model of ion track structure based on classical collision dynamics (radiobiology application)Physics in Medicine & Biology, 1986
- Mutation and Inactivation of Cultured Mammalian Cells Exposed to Beams of Accelerated Heavy Ions IV. Biophysical InterpretationInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1980
- A heavy particle comparative study. Part IV: acute and late reactionsThe British Journal of Radiology, 1978
- Microdosimetric structure of heavy ion tracks in tissueRadiation and Environmental Biophysics, 1976
- The Possibility of Therapeutic Applications of Beams of Negative π-MesonsNature, 1961