RADIATION HORMESIS: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE AND IMPLICATIONS FOR LOW-DOSE CANCER RISK ASSESSMENT

被引:82
|
作者
Vaiserman, Alexander M.
机构
[1] Laboratory of Mathematical Modeling of Aging Processes, Institute of Gerontology, Kiev
来源
DOSE-RESPONSE | 2010年 / 8卷 / 02期
关键词
LINEAR-NO-THRESHOLD; NATURAL BACKGROUND-RADIATION; CHERNOBYL EMERGENCY WORKERS; IONIZING-RADIATION; ADAPTIVE-RESPONSE; NUCLEAR INDUSTRY; X-RAYS; BREAST-CANCER; NEOPLASTIC TRANSFORMATION; INTERCELLULAR INDUCTION;
D O I
10.2203/dose-response.09-037.Vaiserman
中图分类号
R9 [药学];
学科分类号
1007 ;
摘要
Current guidelines for limiting exposure of humans to ionizing radiation are based on the linear-no-threshold (LNT) hypothesis for radiation carcinogenesis under which cancer risk increases linearly as the radiation dose increases. With the LNT model even a very small dose could cause cancer and the model is used in establishing guidelines for limiting radiation exposure of humans. A slope change at low doses and dose rates is implemented using an empirical dose and dose rate effectiveness factor (DDREF). This imposes usually unacknowledged nonlinearity but not a threshold in the dose-response curve for cancer induction. In contrast, with the hormetic model, low doses of radiation reduce the cancer incidence while it is elevated after high doses. Based on a review of epidemiological and other data for exposure to low radiation doses and dose rates, it was found that the LNT model fails badly. Cancer risk after ordinarily encountered radiation exposure (medical X-rays, natural background radiation, etc.) is much lower than projections based on the LNT model and is often less than the risk for spontaneous cancer (a hormetic response). Understanding the mechanistic basis for hormetic responses will provide new insights about both risks and benefits from low-dose radiation exposure.
引用
收藏
页码:172 / 191
页数:20
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