Affiliation: | 1.Laboratory of Radiobiology & Experimental Radiooncology, Department of Radiotherapy and Radiooncology,University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf,Hamburg,Germany;2.Clinic of Radiotherapy and Radiooncology,University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf,Hamburg,Germany;3.Institute of Medical Biometry and StatisticsUniversity Medical Center Schleswig-HolsteinCampus Lübeck,University at Lübeck,Lübeck,Germany;4.Institute of Clinical Molecular Biology,Christian-Albrechts-University Kiel,Kiel,Germany;5.Center for Clinical Trials,University of Lübeck,Lübeck,Germany;6.Department of Radiotherapy,Charité Universit?tsmedizin Berlin,Berlin,Germany |
Abstract: |
Background and purposeThe aim of this study was to determine the impact of functional single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) pathways involved in the ROS pathway, DNA repair, or TGFB1 signaling on acute or late normal toxicity as well as individual radiosensitivity.Materials and methodsPatients receiving breast-conserving surgery and radiotherapy were examined either for erythema (n?=?83), fibrosis (n?=?123), or individual radiosensitivity (n?=?123). The 17 SNPs analyzed are involved in the ROS pathway (GSTP1, SOD2, NQO1, NOS3, XDH), DNA repair (XRCC1, XRCC3, XRCC6, ERCC2, LIG4, ATM) or TGFB signaling (SKIL, EP300, APC, AXIN1, TGFB1). Associations with biological and clinical endpoints were studied for single SNPs but especially for combinations of SNPs assuming that a SNP is either beneficial or deleterious and needs to be weighted.ResultsWith one exception, no significant association was seen between a single SNP and the three endpoints studied. No significant associations were also observed when applying a multi-SNP model assuming that each SNP was deleterious. In contrast, significant associations were obtained when SNPs were suggested to be either beneficial or deleterious. These associations increased, when each SNP was weighted individually. Detailed analysis revealed that both erythema and individual radiosensitivity especially depend on SNPs affecting DNA repair and TGFB1 signaling, while SNPs in ROS pathway were of minor importance.ConclusionFunctional pathways of SNPs may be used to form a risk score allowing to predict acute and late radiation-induced toxicity but also to unravel the underlying biological mechanisms. |