无毛小鼠辐射性皮炎模型模拟人类辐射性皮炎

Jessica Lawrence, Davis Seelig, Kimberly Demos-Davies, Clara Ferreira, Yanan Ren, Li Wang, Sk Kayum Alam, Rendong Yang, Alonso Guedes, Angela Craig, Luke H. Hoeppner
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摘要

一半以上的癌症患者会接受放射治疗。大多数接受放射治疗的人都会出现中度至重度放射性皮炎,给患者带来疼痛、美观方面的困扰,并对肿瘤控制产生负面影响。目前还没有有效预防或治疗放射性皮炎的方法。人类放射性皮炎缺乏特征明确、与临床相关的动物模型,这也是缺乏缓解放射性皮炎策略的原因之一。在这里,我们通过对临床和病理皮肤损伤的时间阶段进行关联,建立了人类辐射性皮炎的无毛 SKH-1 小鼠模型,并对其进行了表征。我们证明,使用 6 MeV 电子进行 30 Gy 的单次电离辐射治疗会在 12 天后诱发严重的临床 3 级峰值毒性,表现为明显的红斑、脱屑和部分溃疡,并在 25 天后缓解。组织病理学显示,辐射诱导的皮肤损伤具有时间上独特的炎症变化特征。表皮和真皮 TGF-β1 和 COX-2 蛋白表达上调发生在皮炎高峰期,表皮 TGF-β1 持续表达超过缓解期。一些特定的组织病理学变量在毒性高峰期和临床症状缓解早期仍然很高,包括表皮增厚、角化过度和真皮纤维增生/纤维化,可作为体内干预性临床前研究的特定可测量参数,以减轻辐射引起的皮肤损伤。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Radiation dermatitis in the hairless mouse model mimics human radiation dermatitis
Over half of all people diagnosed with cancer receive radiation therapy. Moderate to severe radiation dermatitis occurs in most human radiation patients, causing pain, aesthetic distress, and a negative impact on tumor control. No effective prevention or treatment for radiation dermatitis exists. The lack of well-characterized, clinically relevant animal models of human radiation dermatitis contributes to the absence of strategies to mitigate radiation dermatitis. Here, we establish and characterize a hairless SKH-1 mouse model of human radiation dermatitis by correlating temporal stages of clinical and pathological skin injury. We demonstrate that a single ionizing radiation treatment of 30 Gy using 6 MeV electrons induces severe clinical grade 3 peak toxicity at 12 days, defined by marked erythema, desquamation and partial ulceration, with resolution occurring by 25 days. Histopathology reveals that radiation-induced skin injury features temporally unique inflammatory changes. Upregulation of epidermal and dermal TGF-β1 and COX-2 protein expression occurs at peak dermatitis, with sustained epidermal TGF-β1 expression beyond resolution. Specific histopathological variables that remain substantially high at peak toxicity and early clinical resolution, including epidermal thickening, hyperkeratosis and dermal fibroplasia/fibrosis, serve as specific measurable parameters for in vivo interventional preclinical studies that seek to mitigate radiation-induced skin injury.
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