Stockholm university

Emely Kjellsson Lindblom

About me

I conduct research and teach in medical radiation physics with a particular focus on radiation biology and radiotherapy. I also work on the coordination and development of the Medical Physics program (300 ECTS), and I am the chair of the PR committee of the Department of Physics.

Teaching

Teaching assignments

I am course responsible for:

My Teaching Philosophy

My teaching philosophy began to form already when I was in high school, and my physics teacher started the first class with the words “I can’t teach you anything. You have to learn on your own”. This made me reflect on the role of the teacher in my own education, and I realised that knowledge can neither be given nor received, it has to be acquired.

As a teacher, I therefore view myself as someone who creates the conditions for others to acquire knowledge themselves. While I do consider each individual student responsible for their own learning, it is my responsibility as a teacher to plan and perform the teaching in a way that motivates, encourages and challenges the students. Acquiring knowledge is very much an active process which must be reflected in the way that the teaching is planned and performed, and I therefore plan all my teaching activities with these objectives in mind. Concretely, I try to motivate by clearly communicating the relevance of and purpose for the learning objectives of the activity at hand in relation to the course, the program, and the students’ future role as professionals. I try to encourage by striving to create a learning environment that is open and including, so that all students should feel comfortable to participate actively on their own terms. In this context, I find it particularly helpful to share with the students which aspects I struggled with when I was a student in the same/a similar course. This not only reduces the gap between them as students and me as the teacher, I believe it also encourages them to sincerely try to understand themselves. To challenge, I like to take a step back from the teacher role, join the students, and rather challenge the material together with them. By softening my position as ‘the one with the answers’, I believe the students are more likely to move from a passive to an active state of mind, trying to find the answer themselves. 

As a teacher, I believe that one of the most important realisations is that everyone is different, and that it would be impossible to predict which teaching activity would suit each individual student best. Rather, I believe it is important to include several kinds of teaching activities covering the same learning objectives. I therefore continuously evaluate my teaching methods and activities, and always seek to develop and improve them.

Research

Since earning my PhD in 2017 with the dissertation "Time, Dose and Fractionation: Accounting for Hypoxia in the Search for Optimal Radiotherapy Treatment Parameters," my research has continued to focus on how mathematical models can be used to develop radiotherapy of cancer. I am particularly interested in the role of the immune system in determining the success of radiotherapy, with or without complementary immunotherapy.

Research projects

Publications

A selection from Stockholm University publication database

  • Assessment of the probability of tumour control for prescribed doses based on imaging of oxygen partial pressure

    2021. Ana Ureba (et al.). Oxygen Transport to Tissue XLII, 185-190

    Chapter

    In radiotherapy, hypoxia is a known negative factor, occurring especially in solid malignant tumours. Nitroimidazole-based positron emission tomography (PET) tracers, due to their selective binding to hypoxic cells, could be used as surrogates to image and quantify the underlying oxygen distributions in tissues. The spatial resolution of a clinical PET image, however, is much larger than the cellular spatial scale where hypoxia occurs. A question therefore arises regarding the possibility of quantifying different hypoxia levels based on PET images, and the aim of the present study is the prescription of corresponding therapeutic doses and its exploration.

    A tumour oxygenation model was created consisting of two concentric spheres with different oxygen partial pressure (pO2) distributions. In order to mimic a PET image of the simulated tumour, given the relation between uptake and pO2, fundamental effects that limit spatial resolution in a PET imaging system were considered: the uptake distribution was processed with a Gaussian 3D filter, and a re-binning to reach a typical PET image voxel size was performed. Prescription doses to overcome tumour hypoxia and predicted tumour control probability (TCP) were calculated based on the processed images for several fractionation schemes. Knowing the underlying oxygenation at microscopic scale, the actual TCP expected after the delivery of the calculated prescription doses was evaluated. Results are presented for three different dose painting strategies: by numbers, by contours and by using a voxel grouping-based approach.

    The differences between predicted TCP and evaluated TCP indicate that careful consideration must be taken on the dose prescription strategy and the selection of the number of fractions, depending on the severity of hypoxia.

    Read more about Assessment of the probability of tumour control for prescribed doses based on imaging of oxygen partial pressure
  • Hypoxia Induced by Vascular Damage at High Doses Could Compromise the Outcome of Radiotherapy

    2019. Emely Kjellsson Lindblom, Alexandru Dasu, Iuliana Toma-Dasu. Anticancer Research 39 (5), 2337-2340

    Article

    Background/Aim: This study investigated the impact of temporary vascular collapse on tumour control probability (TCP) in stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT), taking into account different radiosensitivities of chronically and acutely hypoxic cells. Materials and Methods: Three-dimensional tumours with heterogeneous oxygenation were simulated assuming different fractions of collapsed vessels at every treatment fraction. The modelled tumours contained a chronically hypoxic subvolume of 30-60% of the tumour diameter, and a hypoxic fraction ≤5 mm Hg of 30-50%. The rest of the tumours were well-oxygenated at the start of the simulated treatment. Results: For all simulated cases, the largest reduction in TCP from 97% to 2% was found in a tumour with a small chronically hypoxic core treated with 60 Gy in eight fractions and assuming a treatment-induced vascular collapse of 35% in the well-oxygenated region. Conclusion: The timing of SBRT fractions should be considered together with the tumour oxygenation to avoid loss of TCP in SBRT.

    Read more about Hypoxia Induced by Vascular Damage at High Doses Could Compromise the Outcome of Radiotherapy
  • Impact of SBRT fractionation in hypoxia dose painting - accounting for heterogeneous and dynamic tumour oxygenation

    2019. Emely Kjellsson Lindblom (et al.). Medical physics (Lancaster) 46 (5), 2512-2521

    Article

    Purpose

    Tumor hypoxia, often found in nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC), implies an increased resistance to radiotherapy. Pretreatment assessment of tumor oxygenation is, therefore, warranted in these patients, as functional imaging of hypoxia could be used as a basis for dose painting. This study aimed at investigating the feasibility of using a method for calculating the dose required in hypoxic subvolumes segmented on 18F‐HX4 positron emission tomography (PET) imaging of NSCLC.

    Methods

    Positron emission tomography imaging data based on the hypoxia tracer 18F‐HX4 of 19 NSCLC patients were included in the study. Normalized tracer uptake was converted to oxygen partial pressure (pO2) and hypoxic target volumes (HTVs) were segmented using a threshold of 10 mmHg. Uniform doses required to overcome the hypoxic resistance in the target volumes were calculated based on a previously proposed method taking into account the effect of interfraction reoxygenation, for fractionation schedules ranging from extremely hypofractionated stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) to conventionally fractionated radiotherapy.

    Results

    Gross target volumes ranged between 6.2 and 859.6 cm3, and the hypoxic fraction < 10 mmHg between 1.2% and 72.4%. The calculated doses for overcoming the resistance of cells in the HTVs were comparable to those currently prescribed in clinical practice as well as those previously tested in feasibility studies on dose escalation in NSCLC. Depending on the size of the HTV and the distribution of pO2, HTV doses were calculated as 43.6–48.4 Gy for a three‐fraction schedule, 51.7–57.6 Gy for five fractions, and 59.5–66.4 Gy for eight fractions. For patients in whom the HTV pO2 distribution was more favorable, a lower dose was required despite a bigger volume. Tumor control probability was lower for single‐fraction schedules, while higher levels of tumor control probability were found for schedules employing several fractions.

    Conclusions

    The method to account for heterogeneous and dynamic hypoxia in target volume segmentation and dose prescription based on 18F‐HX4‐PET imaging appears feasible in NSCLC patients. The distribution of oxygen partial pressure within HTV could impact the required prescribed dose more than the size of the volume.

    Read more about Impact of SBRT fractionation in hypoxia dose painting - accounting for heterogeneous and dynamic tumour oxygenation
  • Radiation-induced vascular damage and the impact on the treatment outcome of stereotactic body radiotherapy

    2019. Emely Kjellsson Lindblom (et al.). Anticancer Research 39 (6), 2721-2727

    Article

    Background/Aim: The aim of this study was to investigate radiation-induced tumour vascular damage and its impact thereof on the outcome of stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT). Materials and Methods: Vessel densities in animal tumours before and after a single dose of 20 Gy were quantified and used as input for simulations of three-dimensional tumours with heterogeneous oxygenation. SBRT treatments of the modelled tumours in 1-8 fractions were simulated. The impact of vessel collapse on the outcome of SBRT was investigated by calculating tumour control probability (TCP) and the dose required to obtain a TCP of 50% (D50). Results: A radiation-induced increase of acute hypoxia in tumours during SBRT treatment could be simulated based on the experimental data. The D50 values for these tumours were higher than for the simulated tumours without vessel collapse. Conclusion: The vascular changes after high doses of radiation could compromise the outcome of SBRT by increasing tumour hypoxia.

    Read more about Radiation-induced vascular damage and the impact on the treatment outcome of stereotactic body radiotherapy
  • Accounting for Two Forms of Hypoxia for Predicting Tumour Control Probability in Radiotherapy

    2018. Emely Lindblom, Iuliana Toma-Dasu, Alexandru Dasu. Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology 1042, 183-187

    Article

    The progress in functional imaging and dose delivery has opened the possibility of targeting tumour hypoxia with radiotherapy. Advanced approaches apply quantitative information on tumour oxygenation retrieved from imaging in dose prescription. These do not, however, take into account the potential difference in radiosensitivity of chronically and acutely hypoxic cells. It was the aim of this study to evaluate the implications of assuming the same or different sensitivities for the hypoxic cells. An in silico 3D-model of a hypoxic tumour with heterogeneous oxygenation was used to model the probabilities of tumour control with different radiotherapy regimens. The results show that by taking into account the potential lower radioresistance of chronically hypoxic cells deprived of oxygen and nutrients, the total dose required to achieve a certain level of control is substantially reduced for a given fractionation scheme in comparison to the case when chronically and acutely hypoxic cells are assumed to have similar features. The results also suggest that the presence of chronic hypoxia could explain the success of radiotherapy for some hypoxic tumours. Given the implications for clinical dose escalation trials, further exploration of the influence of the different forms of hypoxia on treatment outcome is therefore warranted.

    Read more about Accounting for Two Forms of Hypoxia for Predicting Tumour Control Probability in Radiotherapy
  • Non-linear conversion of HX4 uptake for automatic segmentation of hypoxic volumes and dose prescription

    2018. Ana Ureba (et al.). Acta Oncologica 57 (4), 485-490

    Article

    Background: Tumour hypoxia is associated with increased radioresistance and poor response to radiotherapy. Pre-treatment assessment of tumour oxygenation could therefore give the possibility to tailor the treatment by calculating the required boost dose needed to overcome the increased radioresistance in hypoxic tumours. This study concerned the derivation of a non-linear conversion function between the uptake of the hypoxia-PET tracer 18F-HX4 and oxygen partial pressure (pO2).

    Material and methods: Building on previous experience with FMISO including experimental data on tracer uptake and pO2, tracer-specific model parameters were derived for converting the normalised HX4-uptake at the optimal imaging time point to pO2. The conversion function was implemented in a Python-based computational platform utilising the scripting and the registration modules of the treatment planning system RayStation. Subsequently, the conversion function was applied to determine the pO2 in eight non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients imaged with HX4-PET before the start of radiotherapy. Automatic segmentation of hypoxic target volumes (HTVs) was then performed using thresholds around 10 mmHg. The HTVs were compared to sub-volumes segmented based on a tumour-to-blood ratio (TBR) of 1.4 using the aortic arch as the reference oxygenated region. The boost dose required to achieve 95% local control was then calculated based on the calibrated levels of hypoxia, assuming inter-fraction reoxygenation due to changes in acute hypoxia but no overall improvement of the oxygenation status.

    Results: Using the developed conversion tool, HTVs could be obtained using pO2 a threshold of 10 mmHg which were in agreement with the TBR segmentation. The dose levels required to the HTVs to achieve local control were feasible, being around 70–80 Gy in 24 fractions.

    Conclusions: Non-linear conversion of tracer uptake to pO2 in NSCLC imaged with HX4-PET allows a quantitative determination of the dose-boost needed to achieve a high probability of local control.

    Read more about Non-linear conversion of HX4 uptake for automatic segmentation of hypoxic volumes and dose prescription
  • Defining the hypoxic target volume based on positron emission tomography for image guided radiotherapy – the influence of the choice of the reference region and conversion function

    2017. Emely Lindblom (et al.). Acta Oncologica 56 (6), 819-825

    Article

    Background: Hypoxia imaged by positron emission tomography (PET) is a potential target for optimization in radiotherapy. However, the implementation of this approach with respect to the conversion of intensities in the images into oxygenation and radiosensitivity maps is not straightforward. This study investigated the feasibility of applying two conversion approaches previously derived for 18F-labeled fluoromisonidazole (18F-FMISO)-PET images for the hypoxia tracer 18F-flortanidazole (18F-HX4).

    Material and methods: Ten non-small-cell lung cancer patients imaged with 18F-HX4 before the start of radiotherapy were considered in this study. PET image uptake was normalized to a well-oxygenated reference region and subsequently linear and non-linear conversions were used to determine tissue oxygenations maps. These were subsequently used to delineate hypoxic volumes based partial oxygen pressure (pO2) thresholds. The results were compared to hypoxic volumes segmented using a tissue-to-background ratio of 1.4 for 18F-HX4 uptake.

    Results: While the linear conversion function was not found to result in realistic oxygenation maps, the non-linear function resulted in reasonably sized sub-volumes in good agreement with uptake-based segmented volumes for a limited range of pO2 thresholds. However, the pO2 values corresponding to this range were significantly higher than what is normally considered as hypoxia. The similarity in size, shape, and relative location between uptake-based sub-volumes and volumes based on the conversion to pO2 suggests that the relationship between uptake and pO2 is similar for 18F-FMISO and 18F-HX4, but that the model parameters need to be adjusted for the latter.

    Conclusions: A non-linear conversion function between uptake and oxygen partial pressure for 18F-FMISO-PET could be applied to 18F-HX4 images to delineate hypoxic sub-volumes of similar size, shape, and relative location as based directly on the uptake. In order to apply the model for e.g., dose-painting, new parameters need to be derived for the accurate calculation of dose-modifying factors for this tracer.

    Read more about Defining the hypoxic target volume based on positron emission tomography for image guided radiotherapy – the influence of the choice of the reference region and conversion function
  • High brachytherapy doses can counteract hypoxia in cervical cancer – a modelling study

    2017. Emely Lindblom (et al.). Physics in Medicine and Biology 62 (2), 560-572

    Article

    Tumour hypoxia is a well-known adverse factor for the outcome of radiotherapy. For cervical tumours in particular, several studies indicate large variability in tumour oxygenation. However, clinical evidence shows that the management of cervical cancer including brachytherapy leads to high rate of success. It was the purpose of this study to investigate whether the success of brachytherapy for cervical cancer, seemingly regardless of oxygenation status, could be explained by the characteristics of the brachytherapy dose distributions.

    To this end, a previously used in silico model of tumour oxygenation and radiation response was further developed to simulate the treatment of cervical cancer employing a combination of external beam radiotherapy and intracavitary brachytherapy. Using a clinically-derived brachytherapy dose distribution and assuming a homogeneous dose delivered by external radiotherapy, cell survival was assessed on voxel level by taking into account the variation of sensitivity with oxygenation as well as the effects of repair, repopulation and reoxygenation during treatment. Various scenarios were considered for the conformity of the brachytherapy dose distribution to the hypoxic region in the target.

    By using the clinically-prescribed brachytherapy dose distribution and varying the total dose delivered with external beam radiotherapy in 25 fractions, the resulting values of the dose for 50% tumour control, D 50, were in agreement with clinically-observed values for high cure rates if fast reoxygenation was assumed. The D 50 was furthermore similar for the different degrees of conformity of the brachytherapy dose distribution to the tumour, regardless of whether the hypoxic fraction was 10%, 25%, or 40%. To achieve 50% control with external RT only, a total dose of more than 70 Gy in 25 fractions would be required for all cases considered.

    It can thus be concluded that the high doses delivered in brachytherapy can counteract the increased radioresistance caused by hypoxia if fast reoxygenation is assumed.

    Read more about High brachytherapy doses can counteract hypoxia in cervical cancer – a modelling study
  • Time, dose and fractionation: accounting for hypoxia in the search for optimal radiotherapy treatment parameters

    2017. Emely Kjellsson Lindblom.

    Thesis (Doc)

    The search for the optimal choice of treatment time, dose and fractionation regimen is one of the major challenges in radiation therapy. Several aspects of the radiation response of tumours and normal tissues give different indications of how the parameters defining a fractionation schedule should be altered relative to each other which often results in contradictory conclusions. For example, the increased sensitivity to fractionation in late-reacting as opposed to early-reacting tissues indicates that a large number of fractions is beneficial, while the issue of accelerated repopulation of tumour cells starting at about three weeks into a radiotherapy treatment would suggest as short overall treatment time as possible. Another tumour-to-normal tissue differential relevant to the sensitivity as well as the fractionation and overall treatment time is the issue of tumour hypoxia and reoxygenation.

    The tumour oxygenation is one of the most influential factors impacting on the outcome of many types of treatment modalities. Hypoxic cells are up to three times as resistant to radiation as well-oxygenated cells, presenting a significant obstacle to overcome in radiotherapy as solid tumours often contain hypoxic areas as a result of their poorly functioning vasculature. Furthermore, the oxygenation is highly dynamic, with changes being observed both from fraction to  fraction and over a time period of weeks as a result of fast and slow reoxygenation of acute and chronic hypoxia. With an increasing number of patients treated with hypofractionated stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT), the clinical implications of a substantially reduced number of fractions and hence also treatment time thus have to be evaluated with respect to the oxygenation status of the tumour.

    One of the most promising tools available for the type of study aiming at determining the optimal radiotherapy approach with respect to fractionation is radiobiological modelling. With clinically validated in vitro-derived tissue-specific radiobiological parameters and well-established survival models, in silico modelling offers a wide range of opportunities to test various hypotheses with respect to time, dose, fractionation and details of the tumour microenvironment. Any type of radiobiological modelling study intended to provide a realistic representation of a clinical tumour should therefore take into account details of both the spatial and temporal tumour oxygenation.

    This thesis presents the results of three-dimensional radiobiological modelling of the response of tumours with heterogeneous oxygenation to various fractionation schemes, and oxygenation levels and dynamics using different survival models. The results of this work indicate that hypoxia and its dynamics play a major role in the outcome of radiotherapy, and that neglecting the oxygenation status of tumours treated with e.g. SBRT may compromise the treatment outcome substantially. Furthermore, the possibilities offered by incorporating modelling into the clinical routine are explored and demonstrated by the development of a new calibration function for converting the uptake of the hypoxia-PET tracer 18F-HX4 to oxygen partial pressure, and applying it for calculations of the doses needed to overcome hypoxia-induced radiation resistance. By hence demonstrating how the clinical impact of hypoxia on dose prescription and the choice of fractionation schedule can be investigated, this project will hopefully advance the evolution towards routinely incorporating functional imaging of hypoxia into treatment planning. This is ultimately expected to result in increased levels of local control with more patients being cured from their cancer.

    Read more about Time, dose and fractionation: accounting for hypoxia in the search for optimal radiotherapy treatment parameters
  • Optimal fractionation in radiotherapy for non-small cell lung cancer - a modelling approach

    2015. Emely Lindblom, Alexandru Dasu, Iuliana Toma-Dasu. Acta Oncologica 54 (9), 1592-1598

    Article

    Background. Conventionally fractionated radiotherapy (CFRT) has proven ineffective in treating non-small cell lung cancer while more promising results have been obtained with stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT). Hypoxic tumours, however, might present a challenge to extremely hypofractionated schedules due to the decreased possibility for inter-fraction fast reoxygenation. A potentially successful compromise might be found in schedules employing several fractions of varying fractional doses. In this modelling study, a wide range of fractionation schedules from single-fraction treatments to heterogeneous, multifraction schedules taking into account repair, repopulation, reoxygenation and radiosensitivity of the tumour cells, has been explored with respect to the probability of controlling lung tumours.

    Material and methods. The response to radiation of tumours with heterogeneous spatial and temporal oxygenation was simulated including the effects of accelerated repopulation and intra-fraction repair. Various treatments with respect to time, dose and fractionation were considered and the outcome was estimated as Poisson-based tumour control probability for local control.

    Results. For well oxygenated tumours, heterogeneous fractionation could increase local control while hypoxic tumours are not efficiently targeted by such treatments despite reoxygenation. For hypofractionated treatments employing large doses per fraction, a synergistic effect was observed between intra-fraction repair and inter-fraction fast reoxygenation of the hypoxic cells as demonstrated by a reduction in D50 from 53.3 Gy for 2 fractions to 52.7 Gy for 5 fractions.

    Conclusions. For well oxygenated tumours, heterogeneous fractionation schedules could increase local control rates substantially compared to CFRT. For hypoxic tumours, SBRT-like hypofractionated schedules might be optimal despite the increased risk of intra-fraction repair due to a synergistic effect with inter-fraction reoxygenation.

    Read more about Optimal fractionation in radiotherapy for non-small cell lung cancer - a modelling approach
  • Clinical oxygen enhancement ratio of tumors in carbon ion radiotherapy

    2014. Laura Antonovic (et al.). Journal of radiation research 55 (5), 902-911

    Article

    The effect of carbon ion radiotherapy on hypoxic tumors has recently been questioned because of low linear energy transfer (LET) values in the spread-out Bragg peak (SOBP). The aim of this study was to investigate the role of hypoxia and local oxygenation changes (LOCs) in fractionated carbon ion radiotherapy. Three-dimensional tumors with hypoxic subvolumes were simulated assuming interfraction LOCs. Different fractionations were applied using a clinically relevant treatment plan with a known LET distribution. The surviving fraction was calculated, taking oxygen tension, dose and LET into account, using the repairable–conditionally repairable (RCR) damage model with parameters for human salivary gland tumor cells. The clinical oxygen enhancement ratio (OER) was defined as the ratio of doses required for a tumor control probability of 50% for hypoxic and well-oxygenated tumors. The resulting OER was well above unity for all fractionations. For the hypoxic tumor, the tumor control probability was considerably higher if LOCs were assumed, rather than static oxygenation. The beneficial effect of LOCs increased with the number of fractions. However, for very low fraction doses, the improvement related to LOCs did not compensate for the increase in total dose required  for tumor control. In conclusion, our results suggest that hypoxia can influence the outcome of carbon ion radiotherapy because of the non-negligible oxygen effect at the low LETs in the SOBP. However, if LOCs occur, a relatively high level of tumor control probability is achievable with a large range of fractionation schedules for tumors with hypoxic subvolumes, but both hyperfractionation and hypofractionation should be pursued with caution.

    Read more about Clinical oxygen enhancement ratio of tumors in carbon ion radiotherapy
  • Searching for the optimal radiotherapy treatment time, dose and fractionation - the role of hypoxia and reoxygenation

    2014. Emely Lindblom.

    Thesis (Lic)

    The search for the optimal choice of treatment time, dose and fractionation regimen is one of the major challenges in radiation therapy. Several aspects of the radiation response of tumours and normal tissues give different indications of how the parameters defining a fractionation schedule should be altered relative to each other which often results in contradictory conclusions. For example, the increased sensitivity to fractionation in late-reacting as opposed to early-reacting tissues indicates that a large number of fractions is beneficial, while the issue of accelerated repopulation of tumour cells starting at about three weeks into a radiotherapy treatment would suggest as short overall treatment time as possible. Another tumour-to-normal tissue differential relevant to the sensitivity as well as the fractionation and overall treatment time is the issue of tumour hypoxia and reoxygenation.

    The tumour oxygenation is one of the most influential factors impacting on the outcome of many types of treatment modalities. Hypoxic cells are up to three times as resistant to radiation as well oxygenated cells, presenting a significant obstacle to overcome in radiotherapy as solid tumours often contain hypoxic areas as a result of their poorly functioning vasculature. Furthermore, the oxygenation is highly dynamic, with changes being observed both from fraction to fraction and over a time period of weeks as a result of fast and slow reoxygenation of acute and chronic hypoxia. With an increasing number of patients treated with hypofractionated stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT), the clinical implications of a substantially reduced number of fractions and hence also treatment time thus have to be evaluated with respect to the oxygenation status of the tumour.

    The perhaps most promising tool available for the type of study aiming at determining the optimal SBRT approach with respect to fractionation is radiobiological modelling. With clinically-derived tissue-specific radiobiological parameters and well-established survival models, in silico modelling offers a wide range of opportunities to test various hypotheses with respect to time, dose, fractionation and details of the tumour microenvironment. Any type of radiobiological modelling study intended to provide a realistic representation of a clinical tumour should therefore take into account details of both the spatial and temporal tumour oxygenation.

    This thesis, consisting of papers I-III and a summary, presents the results of three-dimensional radiobiological modelling of the response of tumours with heterogeneous oxygenation to various radiation qualities, fractionation schemes, oxygenation levels and dynamics using different survival models. The results of this work indicate that hypoxia and its dynamics play a major role in the outcome of both photon and carbon ion radiotherapy, and that neglecting the oxygenation status of tumours treated with SBRT may compromise the treatment outcome substantially. Continued to include clinical studies on the impact of hypoxia on the treatment outcome in lung cancer patients treated with SBRT, this project will hopefully advance the evolution towards routinely incorporating functional imaging of hypoxia into treatment planning. This is ultimately expected to result in increased levels of local control with more patients being cured from their cancer.

    Read more about Searching for the optimal radiotherapy treatment time, dose and fractionation - the role of hypoxia and reoxygenation
  • Survival and tumour control probability in tumours with heterogeneous oxygenation

    2014. Emely Lindblom (et al.). Acta Oncologica 53 (8), 1035-1040

    Article

    Background: The validity of the linear-quadratic (LQ) model at high doses has been questioned due to a decreasing agreement between predicted survival and experimental cell survival data. A frequently proposed alternative is the universal survival curve (USC) model, thought to provide a better fit in the high-dose region. The comparison between the predictions of the models has mostly been performed for uniform populations of cells with respect to sensitivity to radiation. This study aimed to compare the two models in terms of cell survival and tumour control probability (TCP) for cell populations with mixed sensitivities related to their oxygenation.

    Methods: The study was performed in two parts. For the first part, cell survival curves were calculated with both models assuming various homogeneous populations of cells irradiated with uniform doses. For the second part, a realistic 3D-model of complex tumour oxygenation was used to study the impact of the differences in cell survival on the modelled tumour control probability. Cellular response was assessed with the LQ and USC models at voxel level and a Poisson TCP model at tumour level.

    Results: For hypoxic tumours, the disputed continuous bend of the LQ survival curve was counteracted by the increased radio-resistance of the hypoxic cells and the survival curves started to diverge only at much higher doses than for oxic tumours. This was also reflected by the TCP curves for hypoxic tumours for which the difference in D50 values for the LQ and USC models was reduced from 5.4 to 0.2 Gy for 1 and 3 fractions respectively in a tumour with only 1.1% hypoxia and from 9.5 to 0.4 Gy in a tumour with 11.1% hypoxia.

    Conclusions: For a large range of fractional doses including hypofractionated schemes, the difference in predicted survival and tumour control probability between the LQ and USC models for tumours with heterogeneous oxygenation was found to be negligible.

    Read more about Survival and tumour control probability in tumours with heterogeneous oxygenation
  • Treatment fractionation for stereotactic radiotherapy of lung tumours: a modelling study of the influence of chronic and acute hypoxia on tumour control probability

    2014. Emely Lindblom (et al.). Radiation Oncology 9

    Article

    Background: Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) for non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) has led to promising local control and overall survival for fractionation schemes with increasingly high fractional doses. A point has however been reached where the number of fractions used might be too low to allow efficient local inter-fraction reoxygenation of the hypoxic cells residing in the tumour. It was therefore the purpose of this study to investigate the impact of hypoxia and extreme hypofractionation on the tumour control probability (TCP) from SBRT.

    Methods: A three-dimensional model of tumour oxygenation able to simulate oxygenation changes on the microscale was used. The TCP was determined for clinically relevant SBRT fractionation schedules of 1, 3 and 5 fractions assuming either static tumour oxygenation or that the oxygenation changes locally between fractions due to fast reoxygenation of acute hypoxia without an overall reduction in chronic hypoxia.

    Results: For the schedules applying three or five fractions the doses required to achieve satisfying levels of TCP were considerably lower when local oxygenation changes were assumed compared to the case of static oxygenation; a decrease in D50 of 17.7 Gy was observed for a five-fractions schedule applied to a 20% hypoxic tumour when fast reoxygenation was modelled. Assuming local oxygenation changes, the total doses required for a tumor control probability of 50% were of similar size for one, three and five fractions.

    Conclusions: Although attractive from a practical point of view, extreme hypofractionation using just one single fraction may result in impaired local control of hypoxic tumours, as it eliminates the possibility for any kind of reoxygenation.

    Read more about Treatment fractionation for stereotactic radiotherapy of lung tumours: a modelling study of the influence of chronic and acute hypoxia on tumour control probability
  • The impact of hypoxia on tumour control probability in the high-dose range used in stereotactic body radiation therapy

    2012. Emely Lindblom.

    The use of stereotactic body radiation therapy employing few large fractions of radiation dose for the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer has been proven very successful, high values of tumour control probability (TCP) being clinically achieved. In spite of the success of the fractionation schedules currently used, there is a tendency towards reducing the number of fractions for economical and practical reasons, and also for maximizing the comfort of the patients. It is therefore the main aim of this thesis to investigate the impact of a severely reduced number of fractions on the tumour control probability for tumours that contain hypoxic areas. The impact on TCP of other factors such as hypoxic fraction, distribution of the oxygen partial pressure and location of the hypoxic volume within the tumour were also investigated. The effect of tumour motion due to breathing was included and evaluated using Cone Beam Computed Tomography (CBCT) data from patients imaged with internal markers in the liver and pancreas. The results clearly showed that in the presence of hypoxia, TCP is seriously compromised if there is not enough time for reoxygenation between fractions. A reduction in the number of fractions of just one fraction may require an increase of several Gy per fraction to obtain a similar TCP. The diaphragmatic tumour motion range showed little influence on TCP provided that the PTV encompassed all tumour positions. The dose delivered to the PTV margin was found not to be the only factor that is significant for local control, the average dose correlated better with TCP. The agreement of the results of this work with clinical results also serve as a strong indicator that inter-fraction reoxygenation is an important process in real-life patients treated with stereotactic body radiotherapy.

    Read more about The impact of hypoxia on tumour control probability in the high-dose range used in stereotactic body radiation therapy

Show all publications by Emely Kjellsson Lindblom at Stockholm University