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DOI10.1088/0952-4746/33/3/573
Uncertainties in estimating health risks associated with exposure to ionising radiation
Preston, R. Julian1; Boice, John D., Jr.2; Brill, A. Bertrand3; Chakraborty, Ranajit4; Conolly, Rory1; Hoffman, F. Owen5; Hornung, Richard W.6; Kocher, David C.5; Land, Charles E.; Shore, Roy E.7; Woloschak, Gayle E.8
发表日期2013-09-01
ISSN0952-4746
卷号33期号:3页码:573-588
英文摘要

The information for the present discussion on the uncertainties associated with estimation of radiation risks and probability of disease causation was assembled for the recently published NCRP Report No. 171 on this topic. This memorandum provides a timely overview of the topic, given that quantitative uncertainty analysis is the state of the art in health risk assessment and given its potential importance to developments in radiation protection. Over the past decade the increasing volume of epidemiology data and the supporting radiobiology findings have aided in the reduction of uncertainty in the risk estimates derived. However, it is equally apparent that there remain significant uncertainties related to dose assessment, low dose and low dose-rate extrapolation approaches (e.g. the selection of an appropriate dose and dose-rate effectiveness factor), the biological effectiveness where considerations of the health effects of high-LET and lower-energy low-LET radiations are required and the transfer of risks from a population for which health effects data are available to one for which such data are not available. The impact of radiation on human health has focused in recent years on cancer, although there has been a decided increase in the data for noncancer effects together with more reliable estimates of the risk following radiation exposure, even at relatively low doses (notably for cataracts and cardiovascular disease). New approaches for the estimation of hereditary risk have been developed with the use of human data whenever feasible, although the current estimates of heritable radiation effects still are based on mouse data because of an absence of effects in human studies. Uncertainties associated with estimation of these different types of health effects are discussed in a qualitative and semi-quantitative manner as appropriate. The way forward would seem to require additional epidemiological studies, especially studies of low dose and low dose-rate occupational and perhaps environmental exposures and for exposures to x rays and high-LET radiations used in medicine. The development of models for more reliably combining the epidemiology data with experimental laboratory animal and cellular data can enhance the overall risk assessment approach by providing biologically refined data to strengthen the estimation of effects at low doses as opposed to the sole use of mathematical models of epidemiological data that are primarily driven by medium/high doses. NASA's approach to radiation protection for astronauts, although a unique occupational group, indicates the possible applicability of estimates of risk and their uncertainty in a broader context for developing recommendations on: (1) dose limits for occupational exposure and exposure of members of the public; (2) criteria to limit exposures of workers and members of the public to radon and its short-lived decay products; and (3) the dosimetric quantity (effective dose) used in radiation protection.


语种英语
WOS记录号WOS:000323762800004
来源期刊JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGICAL PROTECTION
来源机构美国环保署
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/61574
作者单位1.US EPA, Natl Hlth & Environm Effects Res Lab, Res Triangle Pk, NC 27711 USA;
2.Vanderbilt Univ Sch Med, Dept Med, Vanderbilt Ingram Canc Ctr, Nashville, TN 37240 USA;
3.Vanderbilt Univ, Med Ctr, Med Ctr North S 1314, Nashville, TN 37232 USA;
4.Univ N Texas, Inst Appl Genet, Hlth Sci Ctr, Ft Worth, TX 76107 USA;
5.SENES Oak Ridge Inc, Ctr Risk Anal, Oak Ridge, TN 37830 USA;
6.Cincinnati Childrens Hosp Med Ctr, Cincinnati, OH 45229 USA;
7.Radiat Effects Res Fdn, Minami Ku, Hiroshima 7320815, Japan;
8.Northwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Chicago, IL 60611 USA
推荐引用方式
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Preston, R. Julian,Boice, John D., Jr.,Brill, A. Bertrand,et al. Uncertainties in estimating health risks associated with exposure to ionising radiation[J]. 美国环保署,2013,33(3):573-588.
APA Preston, R. Julian.,Boice, John D., Jr..,Brill, A. Bertrand.,Chakraborty, Ranajit.,Conolly, Rory.,...&Woloschak, Gayle E..(2013).Uncertainties in estimating health risks associated with exposure to ionising radiation.JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGICAL PROTECTION,33(3),573-588.
MLA Preston, R. Julian,et al."Uncertainties in estimating health risks associated with exposure to ionising radiation".JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGICAL PROTECTION 33.3(2013):573-588.
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