Intervals between multiple fractions per day—Differences between early and late reactions

Authors

  • J. F. Fowler From the Gray Laboratory of the Cancer Research Campaign, Mount Vernon Hospital, North-Wood, England

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/02841868809090338

Keywords:

Therapeutic radiology, accelerated fractionation, intervals, early and late reactions

Abstract

Assuming the linear quadratic model for dose-response curves enables the proportion of repairable damage to be calculated for any size of dose per fraction. It is given by the beta (dose squared) term, and represents a larger proportion of the total damage for larger doses per fraction, but also for late-reacting than for early-reacting tissues. For example at 2 Gy per fraction, repairable damage could represent nearly half the total damage in late-reacting tissues but only one fifth in early-reacting tissues. Even if repair occurs at the same rate in both tissues, it will obviously take longer for 50% of the damage to fade to an undetectable level (3 or 5%) than for 20% to do so. This means that late reactions require longer intervals than early reactions when multiple fraction per day radiotherapy is planned, even if the half-lives of repair are not different.

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Published

1988-01-01

How to Cite

Fowler, J. F. (1988). Intervals between multiple fractions per day—Differences between early and late reactions. Acta Oncologica, 27(2), 181–183. https://doi.org/10.3109/02841868809090338