Publication | Closed Access
The radiosensitivity of a murine fibrosarcoma as measured by three cell survival assays.
56
Citations
12
References
1980
Year
Lc MethodsImmunologyPathologyRadiation BiologyTumor BiologyLung ColonyTd50 MethodRadiation MedicineOncologyCancer Cell BiologyRadiopharmaceutical TherapyRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchRadiation TherapyMalignant DiseaseCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentMurine FibrosarcomaMedicineCell Survival Assays
The radiation sensitivity of a weakly immunogenic spontaneous fibrosarcoma of the C3Hf/Sed mouse (designated FSa-II) was assessed by three in vivo cell survival methods: end-point dilution (TD50) assay, lung colony (LC) assay, and agar diffusion chamber (ADC) assay. The hypoxic fraction of this tumour was also determined by the ADC method. Although there was a good agreement of the cell survival data between the ADC and LC methods, the TD50 method yielded a considerably less steep cell survival curve. Beneficial aspects and limitations of each assay are discussed. In addition, the use of the ADC method for the growth of xenogeneic cell lines and a preliminary experiment with human tumour cells in non-immunosuppressed hosts suggest that this method may be a valuable adjunct for studying the growth and therapeutic responses of human tumour cells.
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