Analysis of dose-incidence relationships for marrow failure in different species, in terms of radiosensitivity of tissue-rescuing units

J. H. Hendry, S. A. Roberts

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    The analysis of 68 published sets of dose-incidence data for marrow failure in different species, using a double-log mortality function, indicates: (a) There is more heterogeneity, i.e. greater sums-of-squares per degree of freedom, within the data sets for mouse than for larger species (monkey, dog, sheep, goat, pig). (b) For mice the curves for acute doses are characterized by a D0 of about 100 cGy for tissue-rescuing units (or target cells), which are depleted at most to about 3 x 10-4 at LD50. (c) Larger species are much less tolerant to target-cell depletion, the corresponding level being consistently in the range of 10-2-10-3 at LD50. Also, the D0 is often lower (~55 cGy), which is compatible in the dog with such a value for hemopoietic progenitor cells. (d) With larger species there is an unexpected reduction in heterogeneity when the dose rate is lower, which gives a D0 lower than expected and a higher extrapolate. It is concluded that the position and slope of the dose-incidence curves are compatible with interpretations based primarily on target-cell number and survival characteristics, modified by additional heterogeneity factors.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)155-160
    Number of pages5
    JournalRadiation Research
    Volume122
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1990

    Keywords

    • analysis
    • Animal
    • Bone Marrow
    • CANCER
    • CELLS
    • DOG
    • Dogs
    • DOSE-RATE
    • Dose-Response Relationship,Radiation
    • Goats
    • Haplorhini
    • Hematopoietic Stem Cells
    • heterogeneity
    • Meta-Analysis
    • MICE
    • MORTALITY
    • MOUSE
    • NUMBER
    • radiation effects
    • Radiation Tolerance
    • radiosensitivity
    • Rats
    • Sheep
    • Species Specificity
    • Support,Non-U.S.Gov't
    • SURVIVAL
    • Swine

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Analysis of dose-incidence relationships for marrow failure in different species, in terms of radiosensitivity of tissue-rescuing units'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this