Cancer risk following low doses of ionising radiation – Current epidemiological evidence and implications for radiological protection

•Recent epidemiological evidence on radiation-related cancer risks is summarized.•Substantial evidence exists that doses above 100 mGy cause cancer.•Growing evidence that doses below 100 mGy may cause cancer was also found.•Recurrent medical imaging procedures can result in doses around 100 mGy.•Hen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Mutation research. Genetic toxicology and environmental mutagenesis 2022-01, Vol.873, p.503436-503436, Article 503436
Hauptverfasser: Rühm, W., Laurier, D., Wakeford, R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Recent epidemiological evidence on radiation-related cancer risks is summarized.•Substantial evidence exists that doses above 100 mGy cause cancer.•Growing evidence that doses below 100 mGy may cause cancer was also found.•Recurrent medical imaging procedures can result in doses around 100 mGy.•Hence, radiological protection aspects should be considered in medical imaging. Recent studies suggest that every year worldwide about a million patients might be exposed to doses of the order of 100 mGy of low-LET radiation, due to recurrent application of radioimaging procedures. This paper presents a synthesis of recent epidemiological evidence on radiation-related cancer risks from low-LET radiation doses of this magnitude. Evidence from pooled analyses and meta-analyses also involving epidemiological studies that, individually, do not find statistically significant radiation-related cancer risks is reviewed, and evidence from additional and more recent epidemiological studies of radiation exposures indicating excess cancer risks is also summarized. Cohorts discussed in the present paper include Japanese atomic bomb survivors, nuclear workers, patients exposed for medical purposes, and populations exposed environmentally to natural background radiation or radioactive contamination. Taken together, the overall evidence summarized here is based on studies including several million individuals, many of them followed-up for more than half a century. In summary, substantial evidence was found from epidemiological studies of exposed groups of humans that ionizing radiation causes cancer at acute and protracted doses above 100 mGy, and growing evidence for doses below 100 mGy. The significant radiation-related solid cancer risks observed at doses of several 100 mGy of protracted exposures (observed, for example, among nuclear workers) demonstrate that doses accumulated over many years at low dose rates do cause stochastic health effects. On this basis, it can be concluded that doses of the order of 100 mGy from recurrent application of medical imaging procedures involving ionizing radiation are of concern, from the viewpoint of radiological protection.
ISSN:1383-5718
1879-3592
DOI:10.1016/j.mrgentox.2021.503436