ORIGINAL RESEARCH

Evaluation of absorbed dose distribution in melanoma B16F10 during contrast enhanced radiotherapy with intratumoral administration of dose-enhancing agent

About authors

1 Blokhin National Medical Research Center of Oncology, Moscow, Russia

2 Burnasyan Federal Medical Biophysical Center, Moscow, Russia

3 Kurnakov Institute of General and Inorganic Chemistry, Moscow

4 Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University, Moscow, Russia

5 National University of Science and Technology "MISiS", Moscow

6 Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology, Moscow

7 The Loginov Moscow Clinical Scientific Center, Moscow, Russia

Correspondence should be addressed: Alexey A. Lipengolts
Kashirskoe shosse 24, Moscow, 115478; ur.liam@stlognepil

About paper

Funding: the study was supported by the Russian Science Foundation (Project ID 18-13-00459).

Received: 2018-09-28 Accepted: 2018-10-20 Published online: 2018-12-01
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Contrast-enhanced radiotherapy (CERT) is a binary treatment modality in which the absorbed radiation dose is not only determined by the parameters of the external radiation source but also affected by the concentration of a dose-enhancing agent (DEA) in the studied object. In this work we assessed the distribution of the absorbed dose in a murine B16F10 melanoma injected with a single dose of an aqueous Bi-DTPA solution. The mice were exposed to a single fraction of X-ray irradiation for 28.5 min. In vivo measurements of DEA concentrations were done on a micro-CT scanner using the radiopacity values of malignant tissues from the obtained CT images. We found that the presence of DEA enhanced the absorbed dose more than twofold in 6% of the tumor volume; in 29% of the tumor volume the absorbed dose increased more than onefold. The tumor growth delay time calculated for our model was 0.76 days (we only accounted for the damage caused directly by radiation), whereas in our previous research study tumor growth delay was 10 days. This discrepancy may indicate that in the tumors exposed to contrast-enhanced radiotherapy growth delay results from both the damage directly caused by radiation and other antitumor mechanisms.

Keywords: contrast enhanced radiotherapy, radiotherapy, melanoma B16F10, dose enhancement, CT, dose-volume histogram

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