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Research Article

Does radiotherapy increase oxidative stress? A study with nasopharyngeal cancer patients revealing anomalies in isoprostanes measurements

, , , &
Pages 1064-1071 | Received 16 Mar 2010, Published online: 06 Sep 2010
 

Abstract

This study aimed to examine if exposure to ionizing radiation during clinical radiotherapy (RT) causes increased oxidative damage. Seven patients with nasopharyngeal cancer (NPC) who underwent RT took part in this controlled-trial study. Blood and urine samples were obtained for F2-isoprostanes (F2-IsoPs) measurement. Urinary F2-IsoPs levels were elevated pre-treatment and remained high (but did not increase) during treatment, but decreased to the normal range after treatment. Plasma F2-IsoPs decreased significantly after the start of treatment before rising midway through treatment. Levels decreased significantly to below baseline following treatment. However, the patients were observed to have substantially lower levels of plasma esterified arachidonic acid (AA) residues than controls. The data shows that NPC is associated with elevated F2-isoprostanes in urine and in plasma after correction for decreased AA levels. RT did not increase these levels and, indeed, was associated with falls in F2-IsoPs. The validity and usefulness of correction of plasma F2-IsoPs for lowered AA levels is discussed.

Declaration of interest: We would like to thank the Biomedical Research Council of Singapore for their research support (BMRC 03/1/21/18/213).

This paper was first published online on Early Online on 29 June 2010.

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