Title of article :
Iterated birth and death process as a model of radiation cell survival
Author/Authors :
Hanin، نويسنده , , Leonid G.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Abstract :
The iterated birth and death process is defined as an n-fold iteration of a stochastic process consisting of the combination of instantaneous random killing of individuals in a certain population with a given survival probability s with a Markov birth and death process describing subsequent population dynamics. A long standing problem of computing the distribution of the number of clonogenic tumor cells surviving a fractionated radiation schedule consisting of n equal doses separated by equal time intervals τ is solved within the framework of iterated birth and death processes. For any initial tumor size i, an explicit formula for the distribution of the number M of surviving clonogens at moment τ after the end of treatment is found. It is shown that if i → ∞ and s → 0 so that isn tends to a finite positive limit, the distribution of random variable M converges to a probability distribution, and a formula for the latter is obtained. This result generalizes the classical theorem about the Poisson limit of a sequence of binomial distributions. The exact and limiting distributions are also found for the number of surviving clonogens immediately after the nth exposure. In this case, the limiting distribution turns out to be a Poisson distribution.
Keywords :
Probability distribution , probability generating function , Fractionated cancer radiotherapy , Tumor recurrence , Birth and death process , Branching process , Clonogenic tumor cell , Limiting distribution
Journal title :
Mathematical Biosciences
Journal title :
Mathematical Biosciences