Search results for "Oxygen enhancement ratio"
showing 4 items of 4 documents
Differential Superiority of Heavy Charged-Particle Irradiation to X-Rays: Studies on Biological Effectiveness and Side Effect Mechanisms in Multicell…
2016
This review is focused on the radiobiology of carbon ions compared to X-rays using multicellular models of tumors and normal mucosa. The first part summarizes basic radiobiological effects, as observed in cancer cells. The second, more clinically oriented part of the review, deals with radiation-induced cell migration and mucositis. Multicellular spheroids from V79 hamster cells were irradiated with X-rays or carbon ions under ambient or restricted oxygen supply conditions. Reliable oxygen enhancement ratios could be derived to be 2.9, 2.8, and 1.4 for irradiation with photons, (12)C(+6) in the plateau region, and (12)C(+6) in the Bragg peak, respectively. Similarly, a relative biological e…
Blood Flow and Tissue Oxygenation of Human Tumors: An Update
1992
It is generally accepted that tumor microcirculation, blood flow, oxygen and nutrient supply, tissue pH distribution, and the bioenergetic status (factors which are usually closely linked and which define the so-called cellular microenvironment) can markedly influence the therapeutic response of malignant tumors. Tumor blood flow is the major determinant for intra-tumor pharmacokinetics and (through modulation of the cellular microenvironment) of pharmacody-namics. The oxygen supply greatly determines the radiosensitivity of the tumors to be treated. The oxygen enhancement ratio, i.e., the ratio of doses with and without oxygen to produce the same biological effect is 2.7 to 3.0. O2 partial…
Hypoxia and radiation response in human tumors
1996
This study demonstrates by an updated analysis of an ongoing prospective study that tumor oxygenation, as measured with a validated standardized polarographic needle electrode method before treatment, powerfully predicts the prognosis of patients receiving radiotherapy for intermediate and advanced stage cancer of the uterine cervix. First evidence for a host component in tumor oxygenation based on a significant correlation between median pO 2 values determined in normal subcutaneous fatty tissue and in cervical cancer is also presented. Further investigations are necessary to clarify whether tumor hypoxia is just a marker of intrinsic tumor aggressiveness or whether the negative impact of …
Erythropoietin to treat anaemia in patients with head and neck cancer
2004
based on the improvement of tumour oxygenation through direct effects (oxygen enhancement effect of radiotherapy) and indirect effects (counteraction of the adverse influence of tumour hypoxia on malignant progression), only increases in haemoglobin concentration that result in improvements in tumour oxygenation can be expected to have a favourable effect on prognosis. The haemoglobin concentration range leading to the highest tumour oxygen levels is most probably between 130 and 140 g/L, since this concentration represents an optimum in terms of the counteracting effects of increasing the blood’s oxygen-carrying capacity and rising viscous resistance to flow. At higher haemoglobin concentr…