Post-irradiation hyperamylasemia as a biological dosimeter. |
| |
Authors: | B Dubray T Girinski H D Thames A Becciolini S Porciani C Hennequin G Socié M Bonnay J M Cosset |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Biomathematics, M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77033. |
| |
Abstract: | Serum alpha-amylase was measured before and 24 h after either total body (31 patients) or localized irradiation including the salivary glands (40 patients) or the pancreatic area (22 patients). A significant increase in amylasemia was observed for doses to the parotid glands larger than 0.5 Gy. A sigmoid function of dose was fitted to the data and predicted a maximum amylasemia level for doses larger than 4 Gy and smaller than 10 Gy. The raw data from other published series were adequately described by the same model. However, the confidence limits of the parameters remained wide, because of a considerable interindividual variability. Post-irradiation hyperamylasemia appears to provide a good criterion for triage of accidentally irradiated patients: 24 h after a dose larger than 2 Gy to the parotid glands, 91% of the patients had an amylasemia level higher than 2.5-fold the upper normal value (sensitivity). Conversely, 96% had their serum amylasemia lower than 2.5-fold the upper normal value when dose was smaller than 2 Gy (specificity). However, a retrospective estimation of the absorbed dose (dosimetry) is not likely to be very precise because of the large interindividual variability. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|