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The Impact of Supportive Care on Survival in Large Animal Models of Total Body Irradiation

Overview
Specialty Radiology
Date 2020 Sep 10
PMID 32909856
Citations 3
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Abstract

Purpose: Well-characterized animal models that mimic the human response to potentially lethal doses of radiation are necessary in order to assess the efficacy of candidate medical countermeasures under the criteria of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration 'Animal Rule'. Development of a model requires the determination of the radiation dose response relationship and time course of mortality and morbidity under scenarios likely to be present in the human population during mass casualty situations. These scenarios include understanding the impact of medical management on survival of the hematopoietic acute radiation syndrome (H-ARS). Little information is available to compare the impact of medical management under identical study conditions. The work presented here provides a comparison of the impact of different levels of medical management (supportive care) on the survival outcome in two large animal models: the male Gottingen minipig and the male rhesus macaque (NHP).

Materials And Methods: In the context of this comparison, limited supportive care consisted of administration of analgesics only, standard supportive care consisted of prophylactic administration of analgesics, antibiotics and fluids (minipigs) or analgesics, antibiotics, antidiarrheals, nutritional and fluid support (NHP) on a set schedule regardless of indication, and full supportive care (NHP only) consisted of analgesics, antibiotics, antidiarrheals, nutritional and fluid support, antiemetics and blood transfusions on an individual animal, trigger-to-treat regimen. Regardless of level of supportive care, minipigs were exposed to total body irradiation using a Co source and NHPs were exposed to total body irradiation using 6 MV photon energy.

Results: Based on estimated LD50 values, the inclusion of antimicrobial or broad-spectrum antibiotics provided a dose modifying factor (DMF) of 1.09 in the minipig, and by 1.15 in the NHP (standard supportive care to limited supportive care ratio. For the NHP, the administration of supportive care based on symptomology rather than a set schedule, and inclusion of blood transfusions yielded a DMF of 1.05 (full supportive care to standard supportive care ratio). Conversely, comparison of the estimated LD50 values between full supportive care and limited supportive care in the NHP provided a DMF of 1.21.

Conclusion: The study reported here provides a comparison of the impact of antibiotic administration on radiation-induced lethality.

Citing Articles

Animal Care in Radiation Medical Countermeasures Studies.

Rios C, Hollingsworth B, DiCarlo A, Esker J, Satyamitra M, Silverman T Radiat Res. 2022; 198(5):514-535.

PMID: 36001810 PMC: 9743977. DOI: 10.1667/RADE-21-00211.1.


Transcriptomics of Wet Skin Biopsies Predict Early Radiation-Induced Hematological Damage in a Mouse Model.

Alkhalil A, Clifford J, Miller S, Gautam A, Jett M, Hammamieh R Genes (Basel). 2022; 13(3).

PMID: 35328091 PMC: 8952434. DOI: 10.3390/genes13030538.


The Natural History of Acute Radiation-induced H-ARS and Concomitant Multi-organ Injury in the Non-human Primate: The MCART Experience.

Farese A, Booth C, Tudor G, Cui W, Cohen E, Parker G Health Phys. 2021; 121(4):282-303.

PMID: 34546213 PMC: 8462029. DOI: 10.1097/HP.0000000000001451.