Impact of spinal cord repair kinetics on the practice of altered fractionation schedules.

1992 
Abstract The kinetics of repair of sublethal lesions in the spinal cord was assessed in detail using a rodent model. Experiments were designed to obtain the fractionation sensitivity, αβ, and to quantify the kinetics of repair after a clinically relevant fraction size. Pairs of 2-Gy fractions at intervals ranging from 0 to 24 h were given from Monday through Friday, to cumulative doses of 40–84 Gy. In addition, two groups of animals received 1.5 or 1.2 Gy twice a day at 8-h intervals, 5 days a week, to total doses of 66–90 Gy and 67.2–98.4 Gy, respectively. All irradiations were followed by a top-up dose of 16 Gy. Analysis of the experimental data revealed that a bi-exponential repair model fit the experimental data significantly better than did the mono-exponential model ( p = 0.002). The repair half times obtained were 0.7 (0.2–1.3) h and 3.8 (2.6–4.9) h, respectively. The proportion of injury repaired by the longer half time was estimated to be 0.62 (0.37–0.86). The data showed that delivering 2 fractions per day at 6- or 8-h intervals instead of one per day led to a 16.5% (11.8–21.1%) and 13.5% (9.1–17.8%) reduction in the tolerance, respectively. Finally, the results indicated that when incomplete repair between fractions was accounted for, the linear-quadratic (LQ) model was valid in describing fractionation response down to 1.2 Gy per fraction.
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