Cancer risks attributable to low doses of ionizing radiation: Assessing what we really know
Top Cited Papers
- 10 November 2003
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 100 (24) , 13761-13766
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2235592100
Abstract
High doses of ionizing radiation clearly produce deleterious consequences in humans, including, but not exclusively, cancer induction. At very low radiation doses the situation is much less clear, but the risks of low-dose radiation are of societal importance in relation to issues as varied as screening tests for cancer, the future of nuclear power, occupational radiation exposure, frequent-flyer risks, manned space exploration, and radiological terrorism. We review the difficulties involved in quantifying the risks of low-dose radiation and address two specific questions. First, what is the lowest dose of x- or γ-radiation for which good evidence exists of increased cancer risks in humans? The epidemiological data suggest that it is ≈10–50 mSv for an acute exposure and ≈50–100 mSv for a protracted exposure. Second, what is the most appropriate way to extrapolate such cancer risk estimates to still lower doses? Given that it is supported by experimentally grounded, quantifiable, biophysical arguments, a linear extrapolation of cancer risks from intermediate to very low doses currently appears to be the most appropriate methodology. This linearity assumption is not necessarily the most conservative approach, and it is likely that it will result in an underestimate of some radiation-induced cancer risks and an overestimate of others.Keywords
This publication has 71 references indexed in Scilit:
- The molecular basis of radiosensitivity and chemosensitivity in the treatment of breast cancerSeminars in Radiation Oncology, 2002
- Increased risk of breast cancer following irradiation for Hodgkin‚s disease is not a result of ATM germline mutationsInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 2000
- Kinetics of DSB rejoining and formation of simple chromosome exchange aberrationsInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 2000
- Occupational radiation exposure and mortality: second analysis of the National Registry for Radiation WorkersJournal of Radiological Protection, 1999
- The adaptive response in radiobiology: evolving insights and implications.Environmental Health Perspectives, 1998
- Possible age-dependent adaptive response to a low dose of X-rays in human lymphocytesMutagenesis, 1998
- Review The link between low-LET dose-response relations and the underlying kinetics of damage production/repair/misrepairInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1997
- A low, adaptive dose of gamma-rays reduced the number and altered the spectrum of S1− mutants in human-hamster hybrid AL cellsMutation Research - Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis, 1996
- Radiation-Induced Adaptive Response for Protection against Micronucleus Formation and Neoplastic Transformation in C3H 10T1/2 Mouse Embryo CellsRadiation Research, 1994
- Trends in childhood leukaemia in the Nordic countries in relation to fallout from atmospheric nuclear weapons testing.BMJ, 1992