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16 February 2017 AEOL 10150 Mitigates Radiation-Induced Lung Injury in the Nonhuman Primate: Morbidity and Mortality are Administration Schedule-Dependent
Thomas J. MacVittie, Allison Gibbs, Ann M. Farese, Kory Barrow, Alexander Bennett, Cheryl Taylor-Howell, Abdul Kazi, Karl Prado, George Parker, William Jackson III
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Abstract

Pneumonitis and fibrosis are potentially lethal, delayed effects of acute radiation exposure. In this study, male rhesus macaques received whole-thorax lung irradiation (WTLI) with a target dose of 10.74 Gy prescribed to midplane at a dose rate of 0.80 ± 0.05 Gy/min using 6 MV linear accelerator-derived photons. The study design was comprised of four animal cohorts: one control and three treated with AEOL 10150 (n = 20 animals per cohort). AEOL 10150, a metalloporphyrin antioxidant, superoxide dismutase mimetic was administered by daily subcutaneous injection at 5 mg/kg in each of three schedules, beginning 24 ± 2 h postirradiation: from day 1 to day 28, day 1 to day 60 or a divided regimen from day 1 to day 28 plus day 60 to day 88. Control animals received 0.9% saline injections from day 1 to day 28. All animals received medical management and were followed for 180 days. Computed tomography (CT) scan and baseline hematology values were assessed prior to WTLI. Postirradiation monthly CT scans were collected, and images were analyzed for evidence of lung injury (pneumonitis, fibrosis, pleural and pericardial effusion) based on differences in radiodensity characteristics of the normal versus damaged lung. The primary end point was survival to 180 days based on all-cause mortality. The latency, incidence and severity of lung injury were assessed through clinical, radiographic and histological parameters. A clear survival relationship was observed with the AEOL 10150 treatment schedule and time after lethal WTLI. The day 1–60 administration schedule increased survival from 25 to 50%, mean survival time of decedents and the latency to nonsedated respiratory rate to >60 or >80 breaths/min and diminished quantitative radiographic lung injury as determined by CT scans. It did not affect incidence or severity of pneumonitis/fibrosis as determined by histological evaluation, pleural effusion or pericardial effusion as determined by CT scans. Analysis of the Kaplan-Meier survival curves suggested that treatment efficacy could be increased by extending the treatment schedule to 90 days or longer after WTLI. No survival improvement was noted in the AEOL 10150 cohorts treated from day 1–28 or using the divided schedule of day 1–28 plus day 60–88. These results suggest that AEOL 10150 may be an effective medical countermeasure against severe and lethal radiation-induced lung injury.

©2017 by Radiation Research Society
Thomas J. MacVittie, Allison Gibbs, Ann M. Farese, Kory Barrow, Alexander Bennett, Cheryl Taylor-Howell, Abdul Kazi, Karl Prado, George Parker, and William Jackson III "AEOL 10150 Mitigates Radiation-Induced Lung Injury in the Nonhuman Primate: Morbidity and Mortality are Administration Schedule-Dependent," Radiation Research 187(3), 298-318, (16 February 2017). https://doi.org/10.1667/RR4413.1
Received: 10 February 2016; Accepted: 28 November 2016; Published: 16 February 2017
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