Hypoxia can be detected in irradiated normal human tissue: a study using the hypoxic marker pimonidazole hydrochloride

Charlotte Westbury(Breast Cancer Now), Alex Pearson(Institute of Cancer Research), A Nerurkar(Institute of Cancer Research), J. S. Reis-Filho(Royal Marsden Hospital), D Steele(Royal Marsden Hospital), Clare Peckitt(Breast Cancer Now), Grace Sharp(Breast Cancer Now), John Yarnold(Institute of Cancer Research)
British Journal of Radiology
November 1, 2007
Cited by 31

Abstract

Chronic tissue hypoxia may play a role in the pathogenesis of late radiation fibrosis. In order to investigate this hypothesis, the immunohistochemical distribution of pimonidazole hydrochloride (n = 14 patients) and carbonic anhydrase IX (CAIX) (n = 38 patients) was studied in samples of previously irradiated normal human tissue. One sample of irradiated breast tissue, which also showed marked histological features of radiation injury, stained positive for pimonidazole hydrochloride. No CAIX staining was seen in irradiated tissue other than some evidence of physiological hypoxia in the epidermis of two samples of irradiated skin; both were positive for pimonidazole and one was focally positive for CAIX. Pimonidazole hydrochloride staining of tissue with morphological changes of radiation injury could support a role for hypoxia in the pathogenesis of late normal tissue fibrosis in humans.


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