文摘
The use of ionizing radiation is critical to cancer treatment and fluoroscopic procedures. However, despite efforts to minimize total radiation dose, many patients experience toxic cutaneous side-effects of ionizing radiation, ranging from mild erythema to subcutaneous fibrosis, telangiectasia formation, and ulceration. Extent of injury is highly variable among patients. Studying the genetic determinants of radiation injury can help develop protocols to reduce radiation toxicity, as well as drive research into effective modulators of the genes and gene products associated with radiation injury. Many studies in the past two decades have identified single-nucleotide polymorphisms that may be associated with susceptibility to cutaneous radiation injury, such as those in genes related to the following cellular responses to ionizing radiation: inflammation, DNA repair, oxidation and stress response, and cell-cycle and apoptosis. This review summarizes the current literature on potential major genes and polymorphisms, in the previously described damage response pathways, that are involved in susceptibility to cutaneous radiation injury. Potential pitfalls of current research and further avenues of discovery will be explored.