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GRADUATE COURSE: PHYSICS 773

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Protons: Neutrons and Boron neutron capture therapy. ... Biological and Physical. Critical Target is DNA. Cell. Nucleus contains DNA ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: GRADUATE COURSE: PHYSICS 773


1
GRADUATE COURSE PHYSICS 773
BASIC CLINICAL RADIOBIOLOGY This is a
graduate level course designed to educate
students on the clinical applications of
radiation biology in cancer therapy.  The course
will be suitable for students in life sciences
interested in general aspects of DNA repair,
cancer biology and clinical radiation therapy. 
This basic course in radiation biology will also
be useful for radiation oncology residents
(PGY1-3) to prepare for the Canadian Royal
College of Physicians and Surgeons Fellowship
exams.  The course will be three hours per week
running from September to December and will
consist mainly of short seminars by the
instructor followed by student discussion.   Final
grades will be based on one final exam (60),
one oral research presentation (20), and
participation/attendance (20).   Location
Hamilton Regional Cancer Centre Time Wednesdays
130-430  
 
2
Unit One
         Interaction of radiation with matter
Types of ionizing radiations Radiation
chemistry Direct and indirect action of
radiation. (a) Photons Photoelectric absorption,
Compton scattering, Pair production (b) Charged
Particles Bethe-Block equation, LET, (c)
Neutrons, (d) protons (e) Origin of different
radiations.          Elementary Processes and
Water Chemistry Primary, Secondary, Chemical,
Biological, radical reactions, biochemistry and
radicals          The oxygen effectEffect of
02 concentration Time of action of oxygen
Mechanism of the oxygen effect Hypoxic cells in
solid tumors Reoxygenation Implications for
radiotherapy. Hypoxia and tumor
progression.          Linear energy
transferDefinition and examples. Relative
biological effectiveness RBE as a function of
LET, dose, dose-rate, tissue type, and oxygen
effect.
3
Unit Two
         DNA damageSingle and double strand
DNA breaks Mechanisms of DNA repair Genes
controlling DNA repair.          Repair of
radiation damagePotentially lethal damage
Sublethal damage in cells normal tissues and
tumors The dose-rate effect in cells tissues
and tumors.          Chromosal and chromatid
aberrations Dose response relationships Use of
the peripheral lymphocyte system as an in vivo
dosimeter.          Mammalian cell
radiosensitivitymitotic death and
apoptosis.          Cell survival curvesTarget
theory Linear-quadratic model Sample
calculations.          Quantitative normal
tissue systems skin clones jejunal epithelium
bone marrow colonies mouse skin pig skin etc.
4
  • ) UNIT THREE
  •          Solid tumor systemsExperimental
    models tumor regrowth measurements, tumor cure -
    TCD50, dilution assay technique, lung colony
    assay system, in vivo/in vitro system and
    spheroids.
  •          Cell and tissue kineticsThe cell
    cycle Autoradiography percent labeled mitoses
    technique Variation of sensitivity through cell
    cycle Growth fraction Cell loss factor Volume
    doubling time Tpot Growth kinetics of human
    tumors.
  •          Time-dose and fractionation The 4R's
    of radiobiology The basis of fractionation
    Early and late responding tissues Proliferation
    in normal tissues Accelerated repopulation
    Hyperfractionation Accelerated treatment
    Modified treatment schedules.
  •          Predictive Assays for(a)
    Radiosensitivity of tumor and normal tissues (b)
    Cell kinetics (c) Tumor hypoxia.
  • Remembered DoseRepair of injury in various
    tissues and organs. Retreatment policies.

5
  • UNIT FOUR
  • Alternative radiation modalitiesProtons
    Neutrons and Boron neutron capture therapy.
  • Chemotherapeutic agents used as adjuvants with
    radiationClasses of agents Cycling and
    non-cycling cells The oxygen effect for
    chemotherapy agents Combination with radiation
    Drug resistance Second malignancies from
    chemotherapy agents.
  •          Radiosensitizers and bioreductive
    drugs.Halogenated pyrimidines Nitroimidazoles
    Hypoxic cytotoxins.
  • ProtectorsSulfhydryl compounds Amifostine
    Misoprostal.
  • Hyperthermia Methods of heating Cellular
    response to heat Repair of thermal damage
    Thermotolerance Hyperthermia combined with
    irradiation Response of tumors and normal
    tissues to heat.
  •          Normal Tissue EffectsDose - Time -
    Volume relationships. Target cells for acute and
    late reactions Pathology of acute and late
    reactions Classification of tissue
    radiosensitivity.

6
  • UNIT FIVE
  •          Radiophysiology of human
    tissuesEffects of irradiation of the skin bone
    and cartilage kidney lung nervous tissues
    ovary testis eye lymphoid tissue Effects of
    irradiation of the oral, pharyngolaryngeal and
    esophageal mucous membrane salivary glands
    Parenchymal versus stroma injury Latency between
    depletion of clonogenic cells and tissue injury.
  •          Total body irradiationProdromal
    radiation syndrome Cerebrovascular syndrome
    Gastrointestinal syndrome Hematopoietic
    syndrome Mean lethal dose (LD50) Treatment of
    radiation accidents.
  •          Radiation CarcinogenesisThe latent
    period Dose response malignancies in prenatally
    exposed children Second tumors in radiotherapy
    patients. Risk estimates in the human BEIR and
    UNSCEAR Committees Calculations based on risk
    estimates.
  •          Heritable effects of radiationSingle
    gene mutations Chromosome aberrations Relative
    vs. absolute mutation risk Doubling dose
    Heritable effects in humans Risk estimates for
    heritable effects.
  • Radiation effects in the developing embryo and
    fetusIntrauterine death Congenital
    abnormalities and neonatal death Growth
    retardation Microcephaly Mental retardation
    Dependence of the above effects on dose,
    dose-rate and stage in gestation Human
    experience of pregnant women exposed to
    therapeutic doses.

7
  • UNIT SIX General (NOT COVERED IN DETAIL)
  • CataractsBasic biology Latency Threshold
    Deterministic effect Relationship to dose High
    and low LET radiations
  • Terminology Techniques of Molecular Biology
  •          Endonucleases. Gel Electrophoresis
    Southern, Northern and Western Blots,
    Hybridization Vector Libraries Gene Transfer
    Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR), Single Strand
    Conformal Polymorphism (SSCP) Methods of
    sequencing. Gene Cloning Strategies.
  • Basic Cancer Biology
  •          Oncogenes Tumor suppressor genes.
    Cytokines and growth factors. Signal Transduction
    Cancer Genetics. Chromosomal changes associated
    with leukemia and solid cancers. Multistep nature
    of cancer.
  •          Gene Therapy Suicide Genes. Cancer
    vaccines. Radiation-inducible genes linked to a
    cytotoxic agent. Genetic manipulation, i.e.
    correcting the genetic defect.

8
773 Time Table Unit One September 12, 19 Unit
Two September 26, Oct 3 Unit Three Oct, 10, 17,
24 Unit Four Oct 24, 31, Nov 7 Unit Five Nov
14, 21, 28 Unit Six Nov 28 Review for Final
Exam Dec 5 Final Exam Dec 12
9
Radiation Oncology 100 Years of Therapy and
Research
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History of Radiation Physics in Medicine
Ernest Rutherford (1871-1937)
Pierre Curie (1859-1906) Marie Curie (1867-1934)
Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen (1845-1923)
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Ionizing Radiation
Food Preservation Medical Sterilization Medical
and Industrial X-rays Isotope Production Nuclear
Medicine Radiotherapy Nuclear Power Sewage
Treatment Artificial Lighting Smoke Detectors
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The Electromagnetic Spectrum
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Average Annual Effective Dose to a North American
Source Average Annual Effective
Dose Equivalent (µSv) Inhaled (Radon and
Decay Products) 2000 Other Internally
Deposited Radionuclides 390 Terrestrial
Radiation 280 Cosmic Radiation 270 Cosmog
enic Radioactivity 10 Rounded total from
Natural Source 3000 Rounded total from
Artificial Sources 600 Total 3600
31
Natural Radioactivity in Your Body
Nuclide Total Mass of Nuclide Total Activity of
Nuclide Daily Intake of Found in the Body
Found in Body Nuclide Uranium 90
µg 1.1 Bq 1.9 µg Thorium 30 µg 0.11 Bq 3
µg Potassium-40 17 mg 4.4 kBq 0.39
mg Radium 31 pg 1.1 Bq 2.3
pg Carbon-14 95 µg 15 kBq 1.8
µg Tritium 0.06 pg 23 Bq 0.003
pg Polonium 0.2 pg 37 Bq 0.6 µg
32
Size of Critical Target DNA
Human Cell Nucleus
Yeast Cell
33
Comparative Radiosensitivity of Living Organisms
Factors that Influence LD50 Biological and
Physical
34
Critical Target is DNA
Cell
Nucleus contains DNA
DNA double stranded helix
DNA is packaged on chromosomes
35
Radiation Biology
LD/50 4 Gy 4 Gy 67 calories 67 calories 3
ml sip of 60C coffee
30-100 Trillion Cells at Risk
  • Different Cell Types
  • Different Cell Cycle
  • Different Cell Targets
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