Frontiers in Oncology (Jan 2021)

Late Side Effects in Normal Mouse Brain Tissue After Proton Irradiation

  • Theresa Suckert,
  • Theresa Suckert,
  • Elke Beyreuther,
  • Elke Beyreuther,
  • Johannes Müller,
  • Johannes Müller,
  • Behnam Azadegan,
  • Behnam Azadegan,
  • Matthias Meinhardt,
  • Felix Raschke,
  • Felix Raschke,
  • Elisabeth Bodenstein,
  • Cläre von Neubeck,
  • Cläre von Neubeck,
  • Cläre von Neubeck,
  • Armin Lühr,
  • Armin Lühr,
  • Armin Lühr,
  • Armin Lühr,
  • Mechthild Krause,
  • Mechthild Krause,
  • Mechthild Krause,
  • Mechthild Krause,
  • Mechthild Krause,
  • Antje Dietrich,
  • Antje Dietrich

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2020.598360
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Radiation-induced late side effects such as cognitive decline and normal tissue complications can severely affect quality of life and outcome in long-term survivors of brain tumors. Proton therapy offers a favorable depth-dose deposition with the potential to spare tumor-surrounding normal tissue, thus potentially reducing such side effects. In this study, we describe a preclinical model to reveal underlying biological mechanisms caused by precise high-dose proton irradiation of a brain subvolume. We studied the dose- and time-dependent radiation response of mouse brain tissue, using a high-precision image-guided proton irradiation setup for small animals established at the University Proton Therapy Dresden (UPTD). The right hippocampal area of ten C57BL/6 and ten C3H/He mice was irradiated. Both strains contained four groups (nirradiated = 3, ncontrol = 1) treated with increasing doses (0 Gy, 45 Gy, 65 Gy or 85 Gy and 0 Gy, 40 Gy, 60 Gy or 80 Gy, respectively). Follow-up examinations were performed for up to six months, including longitudinal monitoring of general health status and regular contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of mouse brains. These findings were related to comprehensive histological analysis. In all mice of the highest dose group, first symptoms of blood-brain barrier (BBB) damage appeared one week after irradiation, while a dose-dependent delay in onset was observed for lower doses. MRI contrast agent leakage occurred in the irradiated brain areas and was progressive in the higher dose groups. Mouse health status and survival corresponded to the extent of contrast agent leakage. Histological analysis revealed tissue changes such as vessel abnormalities, gliosis, and granule cell dispersion, which also partly affected the non-irradiated contralateral hippocampus in the higher dose groups. All observed effects depended strongly on the prescribed radiation dose and the outcome, i.e. survival, image changes, and tissue alterations, were very consistent within an experimental dose cohort. The derived dose–response model will determine endpoint-specific dose levels for future experiments and may support generating clinical hypotheses on brain toxicity after proton therapy.

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