Author:
Giovanetti Anna,Marconi Raffaella,Awad Noha,Abuzied Hala,Agamy Neveen,Barakat Mohamed,Bartoleschi Cecilia,Bossi Gianluca,Canfora Marco,Elsaid Amr A.,Ioannilli Laura,Ismail Horeya M.,Issa Yasmine Amr,Novelli Flavia,Pardini Maria Chiara,Pioli Claudio,Pinnarò Paola,Sanguineti Giuseppe,Tahoun Mohamed M.,Turchi Riccardo,Strigari Lidia
Abstract
AbstractA radiological or nuclear attack could involve such a large number of subjects as to overwhelm the emergency facilities in charge. Resources should therefore be focused on those subjects needing immediate medical attention and care. In such a scenario, for the triage management by first responders, it is necessary to count on efficient biological dosimetry tools capable of early detection of the absorbed dose. At present the validated assays for measuring the absorbed dose are dicentric chromosomes and micronuclei counts, which require more than 2–3 days to obtain results. To overcome this limitation the NATO SPS Programme funded an Italian–Egyptian collaborative project aimed at validating a fast, accurate and feasible tool for assessing the absorbed dose early after radiation exposure. Biomarkers as complete blood cell counts, DNA breaks and radio-inducible proteins were investigated on blood samples collected before and 3 h after the first fraction of radiotherapy in patients treated in specific target areas with doses/fraction of about: 2, 3.5 or > 5 Gy and compared with the reference micronuclei count. Based on univariate and multivariate multiple linear regression correlation, our results identify five early biomarkers potentially useful for detecting the extent of the absorbed dose 3 h after the exposure.
Funder
NATO SPS
Fondazione Umberto Veronesi Fellowship
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
3 articles.
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