Qualitative Evaluation of Sister Chromatid Exchanges Elicited by Combinations of Genotoxic Compounds Using Response Surface Methodology

1988 
Response surface methodology (RSM), a collection of statistical and mathematical techniques, can empirically model multiple agent interactions. The use of RSM allows modeling of the interaction at all levels of each agent, rather than focusing on a single level of effect, thereby describing the changing interaction present. Further, this technique allows qualitative analysis of the resultant model of the combination exposure for existing interactions. RSM was used in the statistical analysis of sister chromatid exchanges (SCE) elicited by combination exposures of genotoxic agents, ethylnitrosourea (ENU) with cis-diaminedichloroplatinum (II) (DDP), and DDP with x-rays. ENU and DDP each exhibited curvilinear concentration-related increases in SCEs. X-ray exhibited a linear increase in SCEs. For the DDP-x-ray combination, RSM analysis indicates a less-than-additive interaction, suggested by the nonparallel concentration-response curves of one agent at varying concentrations of the other. For the DDP-ENU comb...
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