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The Intrinsic /β Ratio for Human Tumour Cells: Is It a Constant?

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Published

Standard

The Intrinsic /β Ratio for Human Tumour Cells: Is It a Constant? / Peacock, J. H.; Eady, J. J.; Edwards, S. et al.
In: International Journal of Radiation Biology, Vol. 61, No. 4, 1992, p. 479-487.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Peacock, JH, Eady, JJ, Edwards, S, McMillan, TJ & Steel, GG 1992, 'The Intrinsic /β Ratio for Human Tumour Cells: Is It a Constant?', International Journal of Radiation Biology, vol. 61, no. 4, pp. 479-487. https://doi.org/10.1080/09553009214551241

APA

Peacock, J. H., Eady, J. J., Edwards, S., McMillan, T. J., & Steel, G. G. (1992). The Intrinsic /β Ratio for Human Tumour Cells: Is It a Constant? International Journal of Radiation Biology, 61(4), 479-487. https://doi.org/10.1080/09553009214551241

Vancouver

Peacock JH, Eady JJ, Edwards S, McMillan TJ, Steel GG. The Intrinsic /β Ratio for Human Tumour Cells: Is It a Constant? International Journal of Radiation Biology. 1992;61(4):479-487. doi: 10.1080/09553009214551241

Author

Peacock, J. H. ; Eady, J. J. ; Edwards, S. et al. / The Intrinsic /β Ratio for Human Tumour Cells: Is It a Constant?. In: International Journal of Radiation Biology. 1992 ; Vol. 61, No. 4. pp. 479-487.

Bibtex

@article{213ccf9e10f74e3ca20e4a9f1f5b0473,
title = "The Intrinsic /β Ratio for Human Tumour Cells: Is It a Constant?",
abstract = "The radiation response of 15 mammalian cell lines comprising 11 human tumour, two human fibroblast and two murine lymphoma cell lines, has been analysed using the linear-quadratic equation. As well as using conventional analysis of acute dose-survival curves to derive values for and β (termed ac and βac), low dose-rate and split-dose experiments have been used to derive independent values of and β (ldr and βRR), respectively. ldr provides a measure of irrecoverable damage, the magnitude of which agreed well with the initial slope of the acute survival curve for most cell lines. βRR derived from split-dose experiments represents a unique measure of recovery for each cell line. Large differences were found between individual values of βac and βRR, especially in the radiosensitive cell lines. Since βRR is a functional measure of recovery we suggest that this is the more relevant parameter in studies of dose sparing. The most striking result of this analysis was found in considering the /β ratios. No relationship was observed between ac and βac resulting in values of ac/βac ranging from 1 to 175. In contrast a positive correlation was observed between ldr and βRR in the 11 tumour cell lines, giving an /β ratio of 9·4 ± 1·8 Gy. This observation of the relative constancy of the ratio for human tumour cells leads to an hypothesis about the role of initial damage as a determinant of radiosensitivity.",
author = "Peacock, {J. H.} and Eady, {J. J.} and S. Edwards and McMillan, {T. J.} and Steel, {G. G.}",
year = "1992",
doi = "10.1080/09553009214551241",
language = "English",
volume = "61",
pages = "479--487",
journal = "International Journal of Radiation Biology",
issn = "0955-3002",
publisher = "Informa Healthcare",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Intrinsic /β Ratio for Human Tumour Cells: Is It a Constant?

AU - Peacock, J. H.

AU - Eady, J. J.

AU - Edwards, S.

AU - McMillan, T. J.

AU - Steel, G. G.

PY - 1992

Y1 - 1992

N2 - The radiation response of 15 mammalian cell lines comprising 11 human tumour, two human fibroblast and two murine lymphoma cell lines, has been analysed using the linear-quadratic equation. As well as using conventional analysis of acute dose-survival curves to derive values for and β (termed ac and βac), low dose-rate and split-dose experiments have been used to derive independent values of and β (ldr and βRR), respectively. ldr provides a measure of irrecoverable damage, the magnitude of which agreed well with the initial slope of the acute survival curve for most cell lines. βRR derived from split-dose experiments represents a unique measure of recovery for each cell line. Large differences were found between individual values of βac and βRR, especially in the radiosensitive cell lines. Since βRR is a functional measure of recovery we suggest that this is the more relevant parameter in studies of dose sparing. The most striking result of this analysis was found in considering the /β ratios. No relationship was observed between ac and βac resulting in values of ac/βac ranging from 1 to 175. In contrast a positive correlation was observed between ldr and βRR in the 11 tumour cell lines, giving an /β ratio of 9·4 ± 1·8 Gy. This observation of the relative constancy of the ratio for human tumour cells leads to an hypothesis about the role of initial damage as a determinant of radiosensitivity.

AB - The radiation response of 15 mammalian cell lines comprising 11 human tumour, two human fibroblast and two murine lymphoma cell lines, has been analysed using the linear-quadratic equation. As well as using conventional analysis of acute dose-survival curves to derive values for and β (termed ac and βac), low dose-rate and split-dose experiments have been used to derive independent values of and β (ldr and βRR), respectively. ldr provides a measure of irrecoverable damage, the magnitude of which agreed well with the initial slope of the acute survival curve for most cell lines. βRR derived from split-dose experiments represents a unique measure of recovery for each cell line. Large differences were found between individual values of βac and βRR, especially in the radiosensitive cell lines. Since βRR is a functional measure of recovery we suggest that this is the more relevant parameter in studies of dose sparing. The most striking result of this analysis was found in considering the /β ratios. No relationship was observed between ac and βac resulting in values of ac/βac ranging from 1 to 175. In contrast a positive correlation was observed between ldr and βRR in the 11 tumour cell lines, giving an /β ratio of 9·4 ± 1·8 Gy. This observation of the relative constancy of the ratio for human tumour cells leads to an hypothesis about the role of initial damage as a determinant of radiosensitivity.

U2 - 10.1080/09553009214551241

DO - 10.1080/09553009214551241

M3 - Journal article

VL - 61

SP - 479

EP - 487

JO - International Journal of Radiation Biology

JF - International Journal of Radiation Biology

SN - 0955-3002

IS - 4

ER -