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ICRP PUBLICATION 99 LOW - DOSE EXTRAPOLATION OF RADIATION RELATED CANCER RISK, 99
ICRP Publication 99 Low - Dose Extrapolation of Radiation Related Cancer Risk, 99
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By
. ICRP

Included in series
International Commission on Radiological Protection, 99

Description
This report considers the evidence relating to cancer risk associated with exposure to low doses of low-LET radiation, and particularly doses below current recommended limits for protection of radiation workers and the general public. It looks at the possibility of establishing a universal threshold dose below which there is no risk of radiation-related cancer. The focus is on evidence regarding linearity of dose response for all cancers considered as a group, but not necessarily individually, at low doses (the so-called linear, no-threshold (LNT) hypothesis). The report concludes that while existence of a low-dose threshold does not seem unlikely for radiation-related cancers, it does not favor the existence of a universal threshold. The LNT hypothesis, combined with an uncertain dose and dose rate effectiveness factor (DDREF) for extrapolation from high doses, remains a prudent basis for radiation protection at low doses and low dose rates.

Contents
ABSTRACT

GUEST EDITORIAL

PREFACE

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

INTRODUCTION

EPIDEMIOLOGICAL CONSIDERATION

Introduction

Inferences based on acute doses in the moderate-to-high dose range

Estimation of risk at low doses and low dose rates

Thresholds vs. the linear, no-threshold theory

Conclusion: Implications for low-dose cancer risk

LOW-DOSE RISK – BIOLOGY

Introduction

Damage caused by radiation

Damage Response Pathways

Fidelity of DSB repair

Impact of defects in DNA repair, checkpoint control and apoptosis

Conclusions

CELLULAR CONSEQUENCES OF RADIATION-INDUCED DAMAGE

Radiation- induced Chromosome Aberrations

Radiation-Induced Somatic Cell Mutations

Adaptive Response, Genomic Instability and Bystander Effect

Conclusions: Implications for Risk Assessment

CARCINOGENIC EFFECTS OF IONIZING RADIATION

Mechanisms of radiation-induced cancer

Tissue Modifying Factors

Radiation-induced Cancer in Animals

Life Shortening

Summary

Conclusions: Implications for radiation-related cancer at low doses

QUANTITATIVE UNCERTAINTY ANALYSIS

Overview

Sources of uncertainty

Allowing for the uncertain possibility of a threshold

Conclusions

CONCLUSIONS

REFERENCES

Bibliographic details
Paperback, 200 pages, publication date: JUL-2006
ISBN-13: 978-0-08-044958-6
ISBN-10: 0-08-044958-1
Imprint: ELSEVIER

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Last update: 30 Nov 2009
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