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Merck

Machine learning approach for quantitative biodosimetry of partial-body or total-body radiation exposures by combining radiation-responsive biomarkers.

Scientific reports (2023-01-19)
Igor Shuryak, Leah Nemzow, Bezalel A Bacon, Maria Taveras, Xuefeng Wu, Naresh Deoli, Brian Ponnaiya, Guy Garty, David J Brenner, Helen C Turner
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During a large-scale radiological event such as an improvised nuclear device detonation, many survivors will be shielded from radiation by environmental objects, and experience only partial-body irradiation (PBI), which has different consequences, compared with total-body irradiation (TBI). In this study, we tested the hypothesis that applying machine learning to a combination of radiation-responsive biomarkers (ACTN1, DDB2, FDXR) and B and T cell counts will quantify and distinguish between PBI and TBI exposures. Adult C57BL/6 mice of both sexes were exposed to 0, 2.0-2.5 or 5.0ย Gy of half-body PBI or TBI. The random forest (RF) algorithm trained on ยฝ of the data reconstructed the radiation dose on the remaining testing portion of the data with mean absolute error of 0.749ย Gy and reconstructed the product of dose and exposure status (defined as 1.0โ€‰ร—โ€‰Dose for TBI and 0.5โ€‰ร—โ€‰Dose for PBI) with MAE of 0.472ย Gy. Among irradiated samples, PBI could be distinguished from TBI: ROC curve AUCโ€‰=โ€‰0.944 (95% CI: 0.844-1.0). Mouse sex did not significantly affect dose reconstruction. These results support the hypothesis that combinations of protein biomarkers and blood cell counts can complement existing methods for biodosimetry of PBI and TBI exposures.

MATERIALS
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Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-FDXR antibody produced in rabbit, Prestige Antibodiesยฎ Powered by Atlas Antibodies, affinity isolated antibody, buffered aqueous glycerol solution