Title: Radiation Protection in Radiotherapy
1Radiation Protection inRadiotherapy
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in
Radiotherapy
- Part 3
- Biological Effects
- Lecture 2 High Doses in Radiation Therapy
2Overview
- Radiobiology is of great importance for
radiotherapy. It allows the optimization of a
radiotherapy schedule for individual patients in
regards to - Total dose and number of fractions
- Overall time of the radiotherapy course
- Tumour control probability (TCP) and normal
tissue complication probability (NTCP)
3Objectives
- To understand the radiobiological background of
radiotherapy - To be familiar with the concepts of tumour
control probability and normal tissue
complication probability - To be aware of basic radiobiological models which
can be used to describe the effects of radiation
dose and fractionation
4Contents
- 1. Basic Radiobiology
- 2. The linear quadratic model
- 3. The four R s of radiotherapy
- 4. Time and fractionation
51. Basic Radiobiology
- The aim of radiotherapy is to kill tumor cells
and spare normal tissues - In external beam and brachytherapy one inevitably
delivers some dose to normal tissue
Brachytherapy sources
Beam 2
Beam 1
Beam 3
patient
tumor
6Basic Radiobiology target
- The aim of radiotherapy is to kill tumour cells -
they may be in a bulk tumor, in draining lymph
nodes and/or in small microscopic spread. - Tumour radiobiology is complex - the response
depends not only on dose but also on individual
radiosensitivity, timing, fraction size, other
agents given concurrently (e.g. chemotherapy), - Several pathways to tumour sterilization exist
(e.g. mitotic cell death, apoptosis ( programmed
cell death), )
7Survival curves
8Radiobiology tumor
- Irradiation kills cells
- Different mechanisms of cell kill
- Different radio-sensitivity of different tumours
- Reduction in size makes tumour
- better oxygenated
- grow faster
9Radiobiology micrometastasis
- Tumours may spread first through adjacent tissues
and lymph nodes nearby - Need to irradiate small deposits of clonogenic
cells early - Less dose required as each fraction of radiation
reduces the number of cells by a certain factor
10The target in radiotherapy
- The bulk tumour
- may be able to distinguish different parts of the
tumour in terms of radiosensitivity and
clonogenic activity - Confirmed tumour spread
- Potential tumour spread
11Reminder
- Palpable tumour (1cm3) 109cells !!!
- Large mass (1kg) 1012 cells - need three orders
of magnitude more cell kill - Microscopic tumour, micrometastasis around 106
cell - need less dose
12Radiobiology normal tissues
- Sparing of normal tissues is essential for good
therapeutic outcome - The radiobiology of normal tissues may be even
more complex as the one of tumours - different organs respond differently
- there is a response of a cell organization not
just of a single cell - repair of damage is in general more important
13Different tissue types
- Serial organs (e.g. spine)
- Parallel organs (e.g. lung)
14Different tissue types
- Serial organs (e.g. spine)
- Parallel organs (e.g. lung)
Effect of radiation on the organ is different
15Volume effects
- The more normal tissue is irradiated in parallel
organs - the greater the pain for the patient
- the more chance that a whole organ fails
- Rule of thumb - the greater the volume the
smaller the dose should be - In serial organs even a small volume irradiated
beyond a threshold can lead to whole organ
failure (e.g. spinal cord)
16Classification of radiation effects in normal
tissues
- Early or acute reactions
- Skin reddening, erythema
- Nausea
- Vomiting
- Tiredness
- Occurs typically during course of RT or within 3
months
- Late reactions
- Telangectesia
- Spinal cord injury, paralysis
- Fibrosis
- Fistulas
- Occurs later than 6 months after irradiation
17Classification of radiation effects in normal
tissues
Late effects can be a result of severe early
reactions consequential radiation injury
18Late effects
- Often termed complications (compare ICRP report
86) - Can occur many years after treatment
- Can be graded - lower grades more frequent
19A comment on vascularisation
- Blood vessels play a very important role in
determining radiation effects both for tumours
and for normal tissues. - Vascularisation determines oxygenation and
therefore radiosensitivity - Late effects may be related to vascular damage
20Summary of radiation effects
- Target in radiotherapy is bulk tumour and
confirmed and/or suspected spread - Need to know both effects on tumour and normal
tissues - Normal tissues need to be considered as a whole
organ - Radiation effects are complex - detailed
discussion of radiation effects is beyond the
scope of the course - Models are used to reduce complexity and allow
prediction of effects...
21There is considerable clinical experience with
radiotherapy, however, new techniques are
developed and radiotherapy is not always
delivered in the same fashion
- Radiobiological models can help to predict
clinical outcomes when treatment parameters are
altered (even if they may be too crude to
describe reality exactly)
22Radiobiological models
- Many models exist
- Based on clinical experience, cell experiments or
just the beauty or simplicity of the mathematics - One of the simplest and most used is the so
called linear quadratic or alpha/beta model
developed and modified by Thames, Withers, Dale,
Fowler and many others.
232. The Linear Quadratic Model
- Cell survival
- single fraction S exp(-(aD ßD2))
- (n fractions of size d S exp(- n (ad ßd2))
- Biological effect
- E - ln S aD ßD2
- E n (ad ßd2) nd (a ßd) D (a ßd)
24Biological effectiveness
- E/a BED (1 d / (a/ß)) D RE D
- BED biologically effective dose, the dose which
would be required for a certain effect at
infinitesimally small dose rate (no beta kill) - RE relative effectiveness
25Quick question???
- What is the physical unit for the a/b ratio?
26BED useful to compare the effect of different
fractionation schedules
- Need to know a/b ratio of the tissues concerned.
- a/b typically lower for normal tissues than for
tumour
27The linear quadratic model
28The linear quadratic model
Alpha determines initial slope
Beta determines curvature
29Rule of thumb for a/b ratios
- Large a/b ratios
- a/b 10 to 20
- Early or acute reacting tissues
- Most tumours
- Small a/b ratio
- a/b 2
- Late reacting tissues, e.g. spinal cord
- potentially prostate cancer
30The effect of fractionation
31Fractionation
- Tends to spare late reacting normal tissues - the
smaller the size of the fraction the more sparing
for tissues with low a/b - Prolongs treatment
32A note of caution
- This is only a model
- Need to know the radiobiological data for
patients - Important assumptions
- There is full repair between two fractions
- There is no proliferation of tumour cells - the
overall treatment time does not play a role.
333. The 4 Rs of radiotherapy
- R Withers (1975)
- Reoxygenation
- Redistribution
- Repair
- Repopulation (or Regeneration)
34Reoxygenation
- Oxygen is an important enhancement for radiation
effects (Oxygen Enhancement Ratio) - The tumour may be hypoxic (in particular in the
center which may not be well supplied with blood) - One must allow the tumour to re-oxygenate, which
typically happens a couple of days after the
first irradiation
35Redistribution
- Cells have different radiation sensitivities in
different parts of the cell cycle - Highest radiation sensitivity is in early S and
late G2/M phase of the cell cycle
M (mitosis)
G2
G1
S (synthesis)
G1
36Redistribution
- The distribution of cells in different phases of
the cycle is normally not something which can be
influenced - however, radiation itself introduces
a block of cells in G2 phase which leads to a
synchronization - One must consider this when irradiating cells
with breaks of few hours.
37Repair
- All cells repair radiation damage
- This is part of normal damage repair in the DNA
- Repair is very effective because DNA is damaged
significantly more due to normal other
influences (e.g. temperature, chemicals) than due
to radiation (factor 1000!) - The half time for repair, tr, is of the order of
minutes to hours
38Repair
- It is essential to allow normal tissues to repair
all repairable radiation damage prior to giving
another fraction of radiation. - This leads to a minimum interval between
fractions of 6 hours - Spinal cord seems to have a particularly slow
repair - therefore, breaks between fractions
should be at least 8 hours if spinal cord is
irradiated.
39Repopulation
- Cell population also grows during radiotherapy
- For tumour cells this repopulation partially
counteracts the cell killing effect of
radiotherapy - The potential doubling time of tumours, Tp (e.g.
in head and neck tumours or cervix cancer) can be
as short as 2 days - therefore one loses up to 1
Gy worth of cell killing when prolonging the
course of radiotherapy
40Repopulation
- The repopulation time of tumour cells appears to
vary during radiotherapy - at the commencement it
may be slow (e.g. due to hypoxia), however a
certain time after the first fraction of
radiotherapy (often termed the kick-off time,
Tk) repopulation accelerates. - Repopulation must be taken into account when
protracting radiation e.g. due to scheduled (or
unscheduled) breaks such as holidays.
41Repopulation/ Regeneration
- Also normal tissue repopulate - this is an
important mechanism to reduce acute side effects
from e.g. the irradiation of skin or mucosa - Radiation schedules must allow sufficient
regeneration time for acutely reacting tissues.
42The 4 Rs of radiotherapy Influence on time
between fractions, t, and overall treatment time,
T
- Reoxygenation
- Redistribution
- Repair
- Repopulation (or Regeneration)
- Need minimum T
- Need minimum t
- Need minimum t for normal tissues
- Need to reduce T for tumour
43The 4 Rs of radiotherapy Influence on time
between fractions, t, and overall treatment time,
T
- Reoxygenation
- Redistribution
- Repair
- Repopulation (or Regeneration)
- Need minimum T
- Need minimum t
- Need minimum t for normal tissues
- Need to reduce T for tumor
Cannot achieve all at once - Optimization of
schedule for individual circumstances
444. Time, dose and fractionation
- Need to optimize fractionation schedule for
individual circumstances - Parameters
- Total dose
- Dose per fraction
- Time between fractions
- Total treatment time
45Extension of LQ model to include time
- E - ln S n d (a ßd) - ?T
- ? equals ln2/Tp with Tp the potential doubling
time - note that the ?T term has the opposite sign to
the a ßd term indicating tumour growth instead
of cell kill
46The potential doubling time
- the fastest time in which a tumour can double its
volume - depends on cell type and can be of the order of 2
days in fast growing tumours - can be measured in cell biology experiments
- requires optimal conditions for the tumour and is
a worst case scenario
47Extension of LQ model to include time
- E - ln S n d (a ßd) - ?T
- Including Tk ("kick off time") which allows for a
time lag before the tumour switches to the
fastest repopulation time - BED (1 d / (a/ß)) nd - (ln2 (T - Tk)) / aTp
48Evidence for kick off time
49Use of the LQ model in external beam radiotherapy
- Calculate equivalent fractionation schemes
- Determine radiobiological parameters
- Determine the effect of treatment breaks
- e.g. Do we need to give extra dose for the long
weekend break?
50Calculation of equivalent fractionation schemes
- Assume two fractionation schemes are identical in
biological effect if they produce the same BED - BED (1d1/(a/ß))n1d1 (1d2/(a/ß))n2d2
- This is obviously only valid for one
tissue/tumour type with one set of alpha, beta
and gamma values - Example at the end of the lecture
51Brachytherapy
- Typically not a homogenous dose distribution
- Low dose rate treatment possible
- High dose rate treatments are typically given
with larger fractions than external beam
radiotherapy - Pulsed dose rate somewhere in between
52LQ model can be extended to brachytherapy
- HDR with short high dose fractions can be handled
very similarly to external beam radiotherapy - However, the dose inhomogeneities inherent in
brachytherapy (compare parts 6 and 11 of the
course) make a good calculation difficult.
53LDR brachytherapy
- An extension of the LQ model to cover low dose
rates with significant repair occurring during
treatment - Mathematics developed by R Dale (1985)
- Too complex for present course
54Brachytherapy
- LQ model allows BED calculation for brachytherapy
- comparison possible for external beam and
brachytherapy - adding of biologically effective doses possible
- Brachytherapy has the potential to minimize the
dose to normal structures - probably still the
most important factor is good geometry of an
implant
55However, caution is necessary
- All models are just models
- The radiobiological parameters are not well known
- Parameters for a population of patients may not
apply to an individual patient
56A note on different radiation qualities
- Not only in radiation protection is there a
different effectiveness of different radiation
types - however - The effect of concern is different
- The Relative Biological Effectiveness (RBE
values) is different - e.g. for neutrons in
therapy RBE is about 3 - The effect of fractionation may be VERY different
57Adapted from Marco Zaider (2000)
58Comparison of dose response of neutrons and
photons
59Summary
- Radiobiology is essential to understand the
effects of radiotherapy - It is also important for radiation protection of
the patient as it allows minimization of the
radiation effects in healthy tissues - There are models which allow to estimate the
effect of a given radiotherapy schedule - Caution is necessary when applying a model to an
individual patient - clinical judgement should
not be overruled
60Where to Get More Information
- Other sessions
- References
- Steel G (ed) Radiobiology, 2nd ed. 1997
- Hall E Radiobiology for the radiologist, 3rd ed.
Lippincott, Philadelphia 1988 - Withers R. The four Rs of radiotherapy. Adv.
Radiat. Biol. 5 241-271 1975
61Any questions?
62Question
- Please calculate the dose per fraction in a five
fraction treatment for a palliative radiotherapy
treatment which results in the same biologically
effective dose to the tumour as a single fraction
of 8Gy (assume a/b 20Gy (tumour) or 2Gy (spinal
cord)).
63Answer (part 1)
- Assuming no time effects (i.e. time between
fractions is large enough to allow full repair
and the overall treatment time is short enough to
prohibit significant repopulation during the
treatment) the biologically effective dose (BED)
of the treatment schedules can be calculated as - BED nd (1 d/(a/b)) with n number of
fractions, d dose per fraction and a/b the
alphabeta ratio - BED (tumour, single fraction) 1 8 (1 8/20)
11.2Gy
64Answer (part 2)
- to get a similar BED in five fractions for the
tumour, one needs to deliver 2Gy per fraction
(BED 11Gy) - BED (spinal cord, single fraction) 1 8 (1
8/2) 40Gy - to get a similar BED in five fractions for the
spinal cord, one needs to deliver 3.1Gy per
fraction (BED 39.5Gy) - This example illustrates how much more sensitive
late reacting normal tissue is to fractionation.
The single dose of 8Gy is nearly 4 times more
toxic to spinal cord than to a tumour.