Abstract

Purpose : This study was conducted to assess the ability of computerized pO 2 histography to measure changes in tumor oxygenation produced by low oxygen breathing. Methods and Materials : Female syngeneic C3H/Km mice bearing SCC VII/St carcinomas were used in these experiments. Changes in tumor oxygenation produced by the mice breathing 10% oxygen were assessed with computerized pO2 histography, 3H-misonidazole binding, and the paired survival curve assay of radiosensitivity. Results : The hypoxic cell fraction of the tumors in mice breathing 10% oxygen was 3.1 times higher than that of tumors in mice breathing normal air determined by an in vivo-in vitro clonogenic assay. Binding of radiolabeled misonidazole to the tumors in mice breathing 10% oxygen was also significantly higher than that to tumors in mice breathing normal air ( p < 0.05). In addition, oxygen tension histograms for normal tissue showed a dramatic shift to a lower oxygen tension when the mice were breathing 10% oxygen. However, under identical conditions, there was only a minimal shift in the oxygen tension of tumor tissue. Although the number of oxygen tension readings in the relatively oxic class in tumor tissue was lower when the mice were breathing 10% oxygen than when breathing normal air, there was not a significant decrease in the median pO 2 value for the tumor. The number of pO 2 readings lower than 5 mmHg in the tumor was not affected by the 10% oxygen breathing. Conclusion : These findings indicate that increases in radiobiological hypoxic fraction produced by lower blood oxygen levels may not correlate well with the results of polarographic measurements of tumor pO 2 levels.

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