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Differentiating unirradiated mice from those exposed to conventional or FLASH radiotherapy using MRI
by
Simon, Aaron
, Limoli, Charles L
, Mosso, Jessie
, Petit, Benoit
, Franco-Perez, Javier
, Ballesteros-Zebadua, Paola
, Lanz, Bernard
, Grilj, Veljko
, Drayson, Olivia
, Stark, Craig
, Jansen, Jeannette
, Kimbler, Adam
, Vozenin, Marie-Catherine
in
Neuroscience
2025
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Differentiating unirradiated mice from those exposed to conventional or FLASH radiotherapy using MRI
by
Simon, Aaron
, Limoli, Charles L
, Mosso, Jessie
, Petit, Benoit
, Franco-Perez, Javier
, Ballesteros-Zebadua, Paola
, Lanz, Bernard
, Grilj, Veljko
, Drayson, Olivia
, Stark, Craig
, Jansen, Jeannette
, Kimbler, Adam
, Vozenin, Marie-Catherine
in
Neuroscience
2025
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Do you wish to request the book?
Differentiating unirradiated mice from those exposed to conventional or FLASH radiotherapy using MRI
by
Simon, Aaron
, Limoli, Charles L
, Mosso, Jessie
, Petit, Benoit
, Franco-Perez, Javier
, Ballesteros-Zebadua, Paola
, Lanz, Bernard
, Grilj, Veljko
, Drayson, Olivia
, Stark, Craig
, Jansen, Jeannette
, Kimbler, Adam
, Vozenin, Marie-Catherine
in
Neuroscience
2025
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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
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