Abstract
In a patient with Morbus Hodgkin, structural aberrations of the chromosome type in peripheral lymphocytes were analyzed during radiation therapy (accumulated target dose 44.6 Gy: 22 fractions of 1.8 Gy each and 2 fractions of 2.5 Gy each at the end of the therapy). The blood was sampled about 5 min after a fraction and/or 24, 48, or 72 h thereafter. The frequency of dicentric chromosomes:acentric fragments:centric ring chromosomes is 37:14:1 throughout the therapy. Independent of the time of blood sampling after a fraction, the distributions of dicentrics and acentrics are overdisperse and represent negative binomial distributions. The yields from these aberrations, as determined during the course of radiotherapy, are best fitted to a linear-quadratic function with a negative quadratic term. The two dose-effect curves (blood sampling about 5 min and 24 to 72 h after a fraction) of dicentrics and acentrics do not differ significantly. Up to an accumulated target dose of about 20 Gy the percentages of cells with chromosome aberrations increase to about 48 to 65% and, at this level, remain constant until the end of therapy.
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