The impact of curative radiotherapy depends mainly on the total dose delivered in the targeted volume. Nevertheless, the dose delivered to the surrounding healthy tissues may reduce the therapeutic ratio of many treatments. Two different side effects (acute and late) can occur during and after radiotherapy. Of particular interest are the radiation-induced late complications (LC) due to their irreversibility and the potential impact on quality of life. In one population treated with the same technique, it appears that individual radiosensitivity clearly exists. In the hypothesis that genetic is involved in this area of research, low CD4 and CD8 lymphocyte apoptosis were shown to be correlated with high grade of LC. In addition, recent data suggest that patients with severe radiation-induced LC possess 4 or more single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in candidate genes and low radiation-induced CD8 lymphocyte apoptosis in vitro. On-going studies are being analyzing the entire genome using a genome-wide association study (GWAS).
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