Persistence of translocation frequencies in blood lymphocytes following radiotherapy: implications for retrospective radiation biodosimetry
- 1 December 2003
- journal article
- Published by IOP Publishing in Journal of Radiological Protection
- Vol. 23 (4) , 423-430
- https://doi.org/10.1088/0952-4746/23/4/005
Abstract
Chromosome aberration analysis using a G-banding technique was performed on peripheral blood lymphocyte cultures from eight individuals over a 5 year period following therapeutic radiation exposure. Samples were placed in three time periods comprising 0-12, 12-36 and 36-60 months post-treatment. The group was heterogeneous with respect to exposure and this resulted in wide differences in initial total translocation yields. Total translocation frequencies declined in seven of the eight cases, reaching significance in four cases. This decline was attributed to a decrease in cells, which in addition to translocations, also contained aberrations such as dicentrics which resulted in them being unstable. In all eight cases, when only stable cells were considered, no significant differences were observed in translocation frequencies between the different time periods post-treatment. Thus, although the frequency of translocations in stable cells is persistent over time, extrapolating to total initial yield, and using this to equate to dose, is not possible in cases where the exposure has been high and non-homogeneous. In practice, retrospective biological dosimetry is more often required in cases of historical, usually protracted, exposures which will have been essentially uniform and not of a sufficiently high dose for many cells to have acquired more than one aberration. In such cases the frequency of translocations observed some years after the exposure can be assumed to reflect induced frequencies and be used for dose estimation.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Chromosomal aberrations induced by chemotherapy and radiotherapy in lymphocytes from patients with breast carcinomaInternational Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics, 2002
- Intercomparison of translocation and dicentric frequencies between laboratories in a follow-up of the radiological accident in EstoniaInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 2002
- Biodosimetry using chromosomal translocations measured by FISH in a population chronically exposed to low dose-rate 60 Co γ-irradiationInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 2001
- The Application of FISH for Chromosome Aberration Analysis in Relation to Radiation ExposureRadiation Protection Dosimetry, 2000
- Induction and Persistence of Chromosome Aberrations in Human Lymphocytes Exposed to Neutrons In vitro or In vivo: Implications of Findings in 'Retrospective' Biological DosimetryRadiation Protection Dosimetry, 2000
- Follow-up analysis of translocation and dicentric frequencies, measured by FISH-chromosome painting in breast cancer patients after partial-body radiotherapy with little bone marrow exposureMutation Research - Genetic Toxicology and Environmental Mutagenesis, 1999
- The 60Co gamma ray dose-response for chromosomal aberrations in human lymphocytes analysed by FISH; applicability to biological dosimetryInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1999
- New Developments in Chromosomal Analysis for Biological DosimetryRadiation Protection Dosimetry, 1998
- The Persistence of FISH Translocations for Retrospective Biological Dosimetry after Simulated Whole or Partial Body IrradiationRadiation Protection Dosimetry, 1998
- Persistence of translocations after accidental exposure to ionizing radiationInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1998