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Differentiating unirradiated mice from those exposed to conventional or FLASH radiotherapy using MRI
Differentiating unirradiated mice from those exposed to conventional or FLASH radiotherapy using MRI
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Differentiating unirradiated mice from those exposed to conventional or FLASH radiotherapy using MRI
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Differentiating unirradiated mice from those exposed to conventional or FLASH radiotherapy using MRI
Differentiating unirradiated mice from those exposed to conventional or FLASH radiotherapy using MRI

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Differentiating unirradiated mice from those exposed to conventional or FLASH radiotherapy using MRI
Differentiating unirradiated mice from those exposed to conventional or FLASH radiotherapy using MRI
Journal Article

Differentiating unirradiated mice from those exposed to conventional or FLASH radiotherapy using MRI

2025
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Overview
The FLASH effect expands the therapeutic ratio of tumor control to normal tissue toxicity observed after delivery of ultra-high (>100 Gy/s FLASH-RT) vs. conventional dose rate radiation (CONV-RT). In this first exploratory study, we assessed whether ex-vivo Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) could reveal long-term differences after FLASH-RT and CONV-RT whole-brain irradiation. Female C57BL/6 mice were divided into three groups: control (non-irradiated), conventional (CONV-RT 0.1 Gy/s), and ultra-high dose rates (FLASH-RT 1 pulse, 5.5 × 10^6 Gy/s), and received 10 Gy of whole-brain irradiation in a single fraction at 10 weeks of age. Mice were evaluated by Novel Object Recognition cognitive testing at 10 months post-irradiation and were sampled at 13 months post-irradiation. Ex-vivo brains were imaged with a 14.1 Tesla/26 cm magnet with a multimodal MRI protocol, including T2-weighted TurboRare (T2W) and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) sequences. In accordance with previous results, cognitive tests indicated that animals receiving CONV-RT exhibited a decline in cognitive function, while FLASH-RT performed similarly to the controls. MRI showed decreased hippocampal mean intensity in the CONV-RT mice compared to controls but not in the FLASH-RT group. Comparing CONV-RT to control, we found significant changes in multiple whole-brain diffusion metrics, including the mean Apparent Diffusion Coefficient (ADC) and Mean Apparent Propagator (MAP) metrics. By contrast, no significant diffusion changes were found between the FLASH-RT and control groups. In an exploratory analysis compared to controls, regional diffusion metrics were primarily altered in the basal forebrain and the insular cortex after CONV-RT, and after FLASH-RT, a trend reduction was also observed. This study presents initial evidence that MRI can uncover clear changes in the brain after CONV-RT but not after FLASH-RT. The MRI results aligned with the observed cognitive protection after FLASH-RT, indicating the potential use of MRI to analyze the FLASH response.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject