PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Radiation-induced lung toxicity in mice irradiated in a strong magnetic field.

  • Ashley E Rubinstein,
  • Skylar Gay,
  • Christine B Peterson,
  • Charles V Kingsley,
  • Ramesh C Tailor,
  • Julianne M Pollard-Larkin,
  • Adam D Melancon,
  • David S Followill,
  • Laurence E Court

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0205803
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 11
p. e0205803

Abstract

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Strong magnetic fields affect radiation dose deposition in MRI-guided radiation therapy systems, particularly at interfaces between tissues of differing densities such as those in the thorax. In this study, we evaluated the impact of a 1.5 T magnetic field on radiation-induced lung damage in C57L/J mice. We irradiated 140 mice to the whole thorax with parallel-opposed Co-60 beams to doses of 0, 9.0, 10.0, 10.5, 11.0, 12.0, or 13.0 Gy (20 mice per dose group). Ten mice per dose group were irradiated while a 1.5 T magnetic field was applied transverse to the radiation beam and ten mice were irradiated with the magnetic field set to 0 T. We compared survival and noninvasive assays of radiation-induced lung damage, namely respiratory rate and metrics derived from thoracic cone-beam CTs, between the two sets of mice. We report two main results. First, the presence of a transverse 1.5 T field during irradiation had no impact on survival of C57L/J mice. Second, there was a small but statistically significant effect on noninvasive assays of radiation-induced lung damage. These results provide critical safety data for the clinical introduction of MRI-guided radiation therapy systems.