Understanding the perfusion of blood and drugs in tumours is fundamental to foreseeing the efficacy of treatment regimes and predicting tumour growth. In particular, the dependence of these processes on the tumour vascular structure is poorly established. The objective of this thesis is to derive effective equations describing blood, and drug perfusion in vascular tumours, and specifically to determine the dependence of these on the tumour vascular structure. This dependence occurs through the interaction between two different length scales - that which characterizes the structure of the vascular network, and that which characterizes the tumour as a whole. Our method throughout is to use homogenization as a tool to evaluate this interaction. In Chapter 1 we introduce the problem. In Chapter 2 we develop a theoretical model to describe fluid flow in solid tumours through both the vasculature and the interstitium, at a number of length scales. Ultimately we homogenize over a network of capillaries to form a coupled porous medium model in terms of a vascular density. Whereas in Chapter 2 it is necessary to specify the vascular structure to derive the effective equations, in Chapter 3 we employ asymptotic homogenization through multiple scales to derive the coupled equations for an arbitrary periodic vascular network. In Chapter 4, we extend this analysis to account for advective and diffusive transport of anticancer drugs delivered intravenously; we consider a range of reaction properties in the interstitium and boundary conditions on the vascular wall. The models derived in Chapters 2–4 could be applied to any drug type and treatment regime; to demonstrate their potential, we simulate the delivery of vinblastine in dorsal skinfold chambers in Chapter 5 and make quantitative predictions regarding the optimal treatment regime. In the final Chapter we summarize the main results and indicate directions for further work.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:510223 |
Date | January 2009 |
Creators | Shipley, Rebecca Julia |
Contributors | Chapman, S. J. |
Publisher | University of Oxford |
Source Sets | Ethos UK |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
Source | http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:8f663f70-8d23-49ad-8348-1763359d8f62 |
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