Modelling the influence of radiosensitivity on development of second primary cancer in out-of-field organs following proton therapy for paediatric cranial cancer

Author:

Dell'Oro Mikaela123ORCID,Wilson Puthenparampil24,Short Michala1,Peukert Dylan5,Bezak Eva16

Affiliation:

1. Cancer Research Institute, University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia

2. Department of Radiation Oncology, Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, Australia

3. Australian Centre for Quantitative Imaging, School of Medicine, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia

4. UniSA STEM, University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia

5. ARC Training Centre for Integrated Operations for Complex Resources, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia

6. Department of Physics, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia

Abstract

Objective: Radiobiological modelling the risks of second primary cancer (SPC) after proton therapy (PT) for childhood cranial cancer remains largely unknown. Organ-specific dose-response risk factors such as radiosensitivity require exploration. This study compared the influence of radiosensitivity data (slope of βEAR) on children’s lifetime attributable risks (LAR) of SPC development in out-of-field organs following cranial scattering and scanning PT. Methods: Out-of-field radiosensitivity parameter estimates for organs (α/β and βEAR) were sourced from literature. Physical distances for 13 out-of-field organs were measured and input into Schneider’s SPC model. Sensitivity analyses were performed as a function of radiosensitivity (α/β of 1–10 Gy) and initial slope (βEAR) from Japanese/UK data to estimate the influence on the risk of radiation-induced SPC following scattering and scanning PT. Results: Models showed similar LAR of SPC estimates for age and sex-matched paediatric phantoms, however, for breast there was a significant increase using Japanese βEAR data. For most organs, scattering PT demonstrated a larger risk of LAR for SPC which increased with α/β. Conclusion: Breast tissue exhibited the highest susceptibility in calculated LAR risk, demonstrating the importance for accurate data input when estimating LAR of SPC. Advances in knowledge: The findings of this study demonstrated younger female patients undergoing cranial proton therapy have a higher risk of developing second primary cancer of the breast tissue. Long-term multicenter registries are important to improve predictive radiobiological modelling studies of side effects.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine

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