Literature DB >> 16380182

Wound healing morbidity in STS patients treated with preoperative radiotherapy in relation to in vitro skin fibroblast radiosensitivity, proliferative capacity and TGF-beta activity.

John M Akudugu1, Robert S Bell, Charles Catton, Aileen M Davis, Anthony M Griffin, Brian O'Sullivan, John N Waldron, Peter C Ferguson, Jay S Wunder, Richard P Hill.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND
PURPOSE: In a recent study, we demonstrated that the ability of dermal fibroblasts, obtained from soft tissue sarcoma (STS) patients, to undergo initial division in vitro following radiation exposure correlated with the development of wound healing morbidity in the patients following their treatment with preoperative radiotherapy. Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) is thought to play an important role in fibroblast proliferation and radiosensitivity both of which may impact on wound healing. Thus, in this study we examined the interrelationship between TGF-beta activity, radiosensitivity and proliferation of cultured fibroblasts and the wound healing response of STS patients after preoperative radiotherapy to provide a validation cohort for our previous study and to investigate mechanisms. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Skin fibroblasts were established from skin biopsies of 46 STS patients. The treatment group consisted of 28 patients who received preoperative radiotherapy. Eighteen patients constituted a control group who were either irradiated postoperatively or did not receive radiation treatment. Fibroblast cultures were subjected to the colony forming and cytokinesis-blocked binucleation assays (low dose rate: approximately 0.02 Gy/min) and TGF-beta assays (high dose-rate: approximately 1.06 Gy/min) following gamma-irradiation. Fibroblast radiosensitivity and initial proliferative ability were represented by the surviving fraction at 2.4 Gy (SF(2.4)) and binucleation index (BNI), respectively. Active and total TGF-beta levels in fibroblast cultures were determined using a biological assay. Wound healing complication (WHC), defined as the requirement for further surgery or prolonged deep wound packing, was the clinical endpoint examined.
RESULTS: Of the 28 patients treated with preoperative radiotherapy, 8 (29%) had wound healing difficulties. Fibroblasts from patients who developed WHC showed a trend to retain a significantly higher initial proliferative ability after irradiation compared with those from individuals in the treatment group with normal wound healing, consistent with the results of our previous study. No link was observed between fibroblast radiosensitivity and WHC. Neither active nor total TGF-beta levels in cultures were significantly affected by irradiation. Fibroblast proliferation in unirradiated and irradiated cultures, as well as radiosensitivity, was not influenced by TGF-beta content. TGF-beta expression in fibroblast cultures did not reflect wound healing morbidity.
CONCLUSIONS: These data are consistent with our previous study and combined the results suggest that in vitro fibroblast proliferation after irradiation may be a useful predictor of wound healing morbidity in STS patients treated with preoperative radiotherapy. TGF-beta levels in culture do not predict WHC, suggesting that the role of TGF-beta in wound healing is likely controlled by other in vivo factors.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16380182     DOI: 10.1016/j.radonc.2005.12.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Radiother Oncol        ISSN: 0167-8140            Impact factor:   6.280


  5 in total

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3.  Studies of the in vivo radiosensitivity of human skin fibroblasts.

Authors:  Richard P Hill; Pavel Kaspler; Anthony M Griffin; Brian O'Sullivan; Charles Catton; Hamideh Alasti; Ahmar Abbas; Moustafa Heydarian; Peter Ferguson; Jay S Wunder; Robert S Bell
Journal:  Radiother Oncol       Date:  2007-06-27       Impact factor: 6.280

4.  Study of Preoperative Radiotherapy for Sarcomas of the Extremities with Intensity-Modulation, Image-Guidance and Small Safety-margins (PREMISS).

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Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2015-11-16       Impact factor: 4.430

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  5 in total

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